Skip to main content

Full text of "Redcliff review (1934-09-20)"

See other formats


+, ~ onto, was elected 


Volume 23 


Bingville Granary 


REVIE 


THE REDCLIFF. REVIEW = ‘‘THURSDAY, SEPT 20th, 1984 


Number 47 


Business is on Annual Meeting of Regulations to ; Gordon Memorial to British Boat 
i Destroyed By Fi C i . 
The Up Grade Little Theatre Asso.) Govern Shares if. treyed By Fire} Celebrate Anniversary) “Wine The First 
Will be Held in. Theatre on vulding aud 1200 Bushels of|S)ecial Services Sunday and 


Now in Canada| 


*o “says Bullitin Issued by | 
The Royal Bank 
“Businegs activity in Canada 
during the second and thiri 
quarters of 1924 has maintain 
¢1 a level well above that achiev 
e. im 1938,” says a bulletis; 
is ued by the Keyal Bank. o1 
(Canada. “In spite of the drouth 


Friday Evening 


On Friday evening of this 
v eek the annual meetiug of the 
local Little Theatre Association 
will be held in the Little Thea- 
tre buil@ing. The meeting is 
called for 8 o'clock. 

All old members as well as ail 
y terested in this movement are 
urgently requested to be pres- 
ent. 

We are assured by officials 


Bank of Canada’ 


Wheat Total Loss 
Shares of the Batik of Canada| Twelve hundred bushels of 


|to the amount of $6,000.000 are} heat were destroyed by fire 


offered for public subsertptlol polly: coon ep om 
by Hon. Edgar N. Rhodes, UR id:trict. The wheat was in a 
ier of Finance. The shate® granary about 50 ‘eet «way 
- - bg and = aa |)com the barn but as the wind 
tvedl-oans mere ‘nan ® |: cs favorable the barn was 
shares may de held by any on@ saved. The building and grain 
rezsen aad only  persoits |were a total loss ns there was 
27e British subjects "aan | insurance on either. The 


Supper on Mondsy 


Keep in mind the Supper and 
Concert in Gordon Memoria) 
School Room on Monday, Sept. 
24th. upper will commence 
xi 530 Concert at 8 p.m. 

A good musical program is 
reing prepared foy the concert. 
Ais¢ a juvenile play entitled 
“Dickory Dock” by kind per- 
uussion of the Daily Mail, Lon- 
don, England. 


Two Cup Races 


Ame-ican Boat Wins Today's 
Race by Over 8 Minutes 


T. O. M. Sopwith’, cha‘ieng- 
ing British yacht, Endeavor, 
has won the first two -aces of 
America’s cup series from Har 
old S. Vanderbiit,s Rainbow, 
scoring the first Brit‘sh race 
victory in the yachting classic 
since the late Sir Thomas Lip- 


‘auch has wrought widespread).4.+ the association ig in excel- neidees fe Canes sai. |‘1"e is supposed to have started| This play ts being put on by|ton’s EMamrock IV won tho 
havoe in the west, and in spit. [rat {Ne asepe silage awn porations controlled in aie}. \ spontaneous combustion|*“@est with the following|second race from Resolute. in 
i beatiaen ivity. ii the = Fg ict rer Pov moves . sta GES S the grain was wet and there |°2*te; Silas Tuttlwell (an old|1920. In all four races have 
siurable industries that} i Aen an Dee cae sateen 9 se pose" Jia my | 25 No fire of any kind near th; |©°°kmaker), Jessie Stiratton,|/Leen run but the first ‘not 


are responsible for the unem- 
rleyment in the cities, there is 


cessful fall and winter is the 
whole hearted cooperation of 


C: nada in the sale of stogh 4 Mr. and Mrs. Larsen were in 


Syivia (his daughter) Flora 


Stratton, Gnomes: Flip-Kath- 


count as the boats did 0 +t finish 
within the time limit. 


st ength and stabiltty in the ‘ : wv institution to which M. leen Cooke, Flap- Betty Belm Sopwith beth 1 

, the citizens. For this reason : m edicine Hat at the time » y er, P won @ nday 
t end towards recovery. Higher hart hoped there will bea good ey nn shia i mL |Culy their son and gaughter|''°P-  Winnifred —Paillps;|and Tuesday races wit! fai: 
renee soe Wueat, heavy produc}. 4), dance on Friday evening. TPspoi aged 14 ana 16 werp at home ‘nnouncer-— Betty @tratton:|margin and showed h':. boat 


ton of newsprint, exports of 
lumber to Great Britain greatly 
iu excess of the exports of last 
jeer, electrical enerxy generat- 
«1 in record volunn. and 4 
steady improvement in the fin- 


: ins will not long be kept 
ia their present narrow imit 
V jthin the past year, wholesale 


hesis for business activity. 
ee 
"at the sixth biendal genera 


tor 
‘the report of the retiring presi- 
dnt showed that 228,821 per 
s‘ns jhad been’ received into 


nembership by  professio. of) ~ 


f: ith during the past 8% years. 
_ JUST FOR: FUN 


*" A scientist declares that the 


jel Calgary.” 


#n invitation is extended to all 
to attend. 

At this meeting election of 
elficers for the coming season 
‘ill take place and plars made 


Ce fall and winter programs. 


A few weeks ago, a young 


Mrs. 


GORDON MEMORLAL 


UNITEL) CHURCH |n cnt of $12.50 tor each share 


Sunday, Sept. 23rd 1934, 
40.a. m. Churek School. 


{ . 11,15 Morning Service. 


Anniversary Servire. ; 

3 p. m. Service at Bowell. 
7:30 p.m. Evening w rship. 
Anniversary s.vice. 


cso of Me 


the financial and economic wi 
‘nre of Canada. a 
The bank is authorized to pi 
vemulative divideyds from 
profits, after provision for 6 
unses, deprec‘ation, etc., at thie 
rate of 4% per. cent per annuity Big Fox Film Termed 


To them is due great credit for 
th: barn with on';'« 
jscont supply of water on the 
} vemises at the time. 


" Dabs i MB carers. + Mhaty 
a lS Bony, 


ot 
Fmance, Ottawa, and must ~ be. 
accompanied by an initial pay- 


second. time in America. Mad: 
eleine Carroll, glamorons star 


cr tion form; evidencing the el- Tone anfi the work of both wor, 
iyribility of the applic ant to be- 
¢ me a shereholder. The bal 
‘nee of the subscription price, 
f7.50 a share, will be payable 
o:... January 2nd, 1935, on or 
«out which date the Bank is 


ADVERTISING CANADA 


—_—— 


Rev. Rowan D. Birning, B. A e pected to commence opera The Travel Bureau, establish 


of Memorial:Church, Medicin:|{.-ns, 
‘ct, will-be*the preacher both 


» -rning and evening 


‘dat the last session of the fed- 
The official proepectus ani|¢"! Parliament, is doing 
application forms are obtainable 


o’, ey finantial institutions. 


Fox Film's “love story of » cen |! 
; 4 comes Monday ’ : D | on 


Curtain Managan— Bile. 

Cuoke; Pianist, Doreen Gooke 

Admission to Supper- Adults 

55. cents, Children 20 eents. 

admission to Concert— Adults 

2.) cents. Chidren 10 cents. 
_—— 0. 


Trance; an} 


t! at women. may become - : 
Lers of the general synod. — 


There is a great scarcity of 


can make good sailing in ali 
kinds of weather. ~ 
In tolday’s race the Rainbow 
won out by over three minutes 
The Endeavor got away to 4 
good start and had a ocmfart. 
tble lead for the first leg. In 


) ——2>"— .. .. | payable half yearly, whieh c FEACE RIVER DISTRICT|the home stretch Vanderbilt 
Sheed base. Series | --nsidered to be an ‘ Epi Opens Monday COVERS LARGE AREA | cutguessed Sopwih by tzking 8 
a Ss Pie ig : “The World Moves On” Bailed — sl ort tack for the finis? 
" Mestrs. 0. Wooding and R. |, ade secutities ee Te hee Mince 
|**mpson were week end visitors | ; © are to be applied mn tural frontier . 


1\Coming to Organize 


Scotland, Jre'anti ani England: eae 
wh Sgr is over ais -inee the size of Bel Adult Singing Class 
zium;five vines that of Don- Eprven 
| the Wrid Moves On” described |™M#@rk, 2 tl ird th. extent of a 


re 


; |Will'be at the Cliff Hall at 8. 


=a 


ing, Voice Production and 


All interested invited to at 


iseases seem necessary as,the poe ; . ' a : 
|’ €vequisite of a more normal "ast infiel a pa = 


‘ OVE! ‘ON 


council of the United Church of of “I Was A Spy.” Miss Carroll ‘ which the railways will sel} 
ewaua Kev. R. 4 RD |B . | |ind'by.a statutcry declaration}, 
Bien eee meas ss w|. Jeustor: Rev. i Belkine Pow |. ich forme part of the appli-|'® c-featured with Franchot Redcliff Remumiscences} cca tnirty- day round trip 


‘ie Agent here today, 
Previously, Mr. Ba':.-.tyne- 


farm help in this d‘strict. at: the explained, a passenger buying 


Fresent time. 
eee 


a ticket with thirty-day limit, 
‘or example, to Winnipeg, was 


Ata social evening held atlrequired to we ticket for con- 
‘ely home on Monday evenin4, |rinvous passage to and from 
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Sherwir| winnipeg only. After Oct 1st 


ss is fu te nounced the engagement of}. similar ticket, without further 
cshypemenonpere $8) 20 of MRC cpio s6y" accor: | f offices, banks and|‘¥" Papers with the object of| ." & icket, wi 
de cath patel that: laws ‘They joy before Th-e 1} fom pest attracting sportamen and tour- tieir daughter, Marian, to Mr.feost or arrangement, wil} permit 


~ Subects taken will be Sight 


histied tramh’.-own--eurid.» into ing to the joy in harvest.” 


®i.ce. You know what some 
gclferg are. 
. , . 
“Just why do you want a 
erried to for you. 
vi thhen ‘an nur ined first Sunday, at 8:30 a, m. 


"we onsous Sap. ST. AMBROSE  HURCH 


_ “Well, replied the boss, “the) Rey, 7, S, Hamnett, Vicar. 
: ¢rted men don’t get s° upset 


the passenger to stop at any 
point, going or returning. be- 
tween the starting point and 
Jostination, within limit, 
a 
WHEAT POOL WILL 
' BROADCAST OCT. 8 
Arrangements ave been 
completed for a program of 
broadcasting by the Wheat 


One of the important functions |" ** 

: be performed by shareholders 

ir. the elect‘on of seven directors 
Celebration of Mass every . —— the oo” and 

S % 

Sunday of each month except hy panne pie , 

« ill supervise and“ control the 


conduct of the tuisiness of th* 

Pank. The seven 'ireetors are }8’ ¢h nominations to be mailed 

-» be elected “frem diversified |‘v each shareholder prior to the 
*} areholders’ meeting. For the 


ST. MARY’S CHURCH 


Alberta leads in legislation. 
Ec sides leading in the temper- 
ance movement, a bill granting 
s::trage to women will be intro- 


‘s Sunday after Trintty,| a cupations, as follows: duced at the next session of the >, Matcha. Beskatehow: 
if I yell at them.” 8rd Cbpt. Two. whose chief occupation |e"nvenience of those who cannot | pyuyingial legislature. pe Psi welt. ka ihe 
. we 8,00 am. Holy Communior |;, in primary industry; two, atliend meetings, provision is an as 


ishes radio facilities at the fol- 


“1e contract she asked: “Does 
Redcliff elevator has |! centres: Winnipeg, Reg 
The new . ; 


+e house stand on the Ameri- 
can or the Canadian side?” 

“On the American,” Preachar . be 
“That's _ Twill sign the| yornon, B.C. » ulated by. ths Governor in the stock has been|/,g 2 Northern. ‘Track prices} “he first broadcast will 

¢ ntract. oh that — special Harvest Thanks-|¢,.neil, ats mete for | bacribed, will be the nomina | today are: Wheat No. 1— 76c., | piven Wedneaay. Ostober 8rd 
cae winters in Canada are Very | wivirig services sve next week's] 4: ¢ nomination -f directors by |*.on qnd election by shareholders | t,o. 278 ¢,, No, 8— 69¢, Oats-|tvtween 8:15 and 8:80 p, m. 
wyere. ae ee ee Bye My and for tice of \' the first Board of Directors. |¢hc., Mlax— $1.29, Barley—STe. |1+ untain standarg time = 


| 
= 


pila: ; Sent rere ; eet Le = = 
i colada a) ee I a RF SOE ae A eA ssh neeicesiing > -_ _ 


= il oe a Pein 


MN hh or nay 


THE .REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA 


GOOD DAY 
MR. JONES 
ay 


1 THANKING 
‘fou FOR THIS 


TOBACCO 


psc) , 9 
® OGDENS 


CUT PLUG 


. Soviet Claims Scouted 


j ” 

Clainf® from Moscow that Russia had usurped second pjace among the 

world’s gold producing countries, superseding Canada, has been received 

. with almost universal scepticism. Apparently, the statement has been in- 
terpreted as just another of those efforts in propagandism with which Soviet 
authorities key their nationals to further sacrifices, but which singularly 
fail to impress the outside world. : 

During progress of the first five year plan, Moscow deluged the world 
with claims of amazing achievement, which, now that the ardors of the 
period have subsided, are being assessed at their true worth. There is no 
gainsayihg the great adyances made in certain industries, particularly the 
so-called heavy industries, under the program initiated: by Lenin and carried 
into effect by Stalin. In some instances these have been spectacular, but 
(and this is the rub) seldom have they, been quite as significant or outstand- 
ing as the claims made concerning them. 

f the leading magazines and newspapers of Britain and 


America are devoting considerable space to reviewing the Soviet industrial | 


and agricultural achievement. These have been equitable, unprejudiced and, 
probably based upon the true facts, for truth and not antagonistic propa- 
ganda is what the public seeks these days. The claims made on behalf of 
socialized endeavor by proponents of Socialism of the Russian variety, ap- 

* parently do not stand the test of statistical investigation. Alan Monkhouse, 
one of the British .engineens sacrificed for propaganda purposes in the 
notoridts sabotage ‘trials of a year or 80 ago, in a. book.of his experiences 
in Russia is surprisingly sympathetic to the Soviet planning scheme in the 
light of the circumstances preceding his deportation. Paying some atten- 

- _. tion to the statistical record of industrial achievement, he shows that the 
, Soviet government's own figures in specialized lines such as house building 
do not compare favorably with similar achievements in capitalistic and in- 
dividualistic England, recorded at the same time. He cites several particu- 


lars in which Soviet authorities claimed to have out-distanced their degen- 
ate and collapsing capitalistic contemporaries, which are not substantiated 
by the facts, 

Apparently, the same is true of the gold production, backed by Russia 
threats that, having overtaken Canada they will shortly overtake and pass 


South Africa in production of the precious metal. In reply to this, Canadian | 


mining authorities maintain that, while undoubtedly Russia has been creep- 
ing up in production, it has not yet supplanted Canada.as ranking second in 
production of newly mined gold. Much of the Russian gold, it is claimed, 
was withdrawn from hoarding and, therefore, it is old gold reclaimed. 

South Africans scoff at what they term a bombastic claim, and have no 
fear of losing premier place among the world’s gold producers. This con- 
tention is backed by Dr. P. S. Nazaroff, formerly a famous Russian geolog- 
ist and now a fugitive from the Bolsheyiks. His statement, based on actual 
knowledge of. the various Russian goldfields and not upon political bias, is 
to the effect that nowhere in Russia do gold-laden bodies occur with the 
regularity and in the volume seen on the Rand in South Africa. “If Rus- 
sian gold fields eyer reach the stage of providing competition for South 
Africa it will be at tremendous cost of time and labor of transportation,” 

; he coneludes._ d bag rao sd es 
pase Sh eres Se old Sa 


Salvaging Gold Md From, Chimney, 


“US. "Assay Office ‘Reclaims. It From | 
The Soot . i 


Many ‘Are Valuable For Something 
Apart From Beauty 


| port, which was read at a conference 


Since the U.S. government devalu- 
- ated the dollar; almost doubling the 
, dollar value of -every..serap of: ‘gold, 
the Assay office in New York 
been using every conceivable precau- 
tion in its*melting room to conserve 
the metal, The Assay Office is housed 
in a -relatively new building, white 
> ' ” and severe, at the corner of Old Slip 
, and South Street. One of “its im- 
+ portant ‘installations is called a fume 
: * precipitator—in reality, a” Séries of, 
‘ “metal sleeves, .each plutnbed by a’ 
hain. Alternating currents. run 
"through the chains and the sleeves; 
+ and,” ds smoke passés up the chim- 
“ney, the soot -particles; containing 
minute quantities.of gold, are dashed 
from the air by thig electric barrage, 
and fall to the bottom of the flue. 
"This precious residue is collected once 
or twice a year by’men who go into 
the basin of, the chimney and shovel 

it out. The Assay Office re 
>, $10,000 to $15,000 on the sale of gold 
récjaimed from “chimney soot. en 
the dust on tha walls is collected for 

r. gold. : y 


eas To ‘Remember 
7) a _ The dehste ovet “7” and’ 4me” 
eS goes on unendingly,.but there is one 
“thing that we. ought to, stop; Jt fs 


Ste 


Most gardens contain at. least one}. 


flower whose value to mankind is not 
to be estimated simply in. terms of 
‘beauty. ‘The leaves of the (stately 
‘foxglove_ yield the drug digitalin, 

ich still has no superior a8 a. cure 


crocus is ‘tlie basis of a preparation 
for gout sufferers; and the lobelia 


tenders good ‘service as a balm for. 


whooping cough; Then what a siren 


is the monkshood! Its attractive blue 


|. conceal.a deadly poison, aconi- 


Money For National Parks 
One Million Dollars -Has Been 
Authorized For This Purpose - 

- Expenditurestotalling. more than 
$1,000,000 for. projects in Canada’s 
national, parks have been authorized 
by the Dominion ~ government, with 
individual amounts ranging from $2,- 
000 to $175,000, the last embraces 
projects in practically all of Canada’s 
western park Playgrounds. Tt is pro- 


‘vided ‘that ‘some ‘of the work will be. 


the Phrase, ‘between you and 1", it Mone by -vontract ater the: test day 


the people who use it would reverse 


the pron6i * and say “between I 
, and you,” ‘might Jearn “td: use 
* the -co; ; hutvevery day we 


hear from the- most unexpected 


? ‘sourees the heart-r 
i ‘you and I’, Phe corte tom 
course, is “between you sait*me.” 


Chan 


“between |. 


of 


‘earth dive in “Africa, | 


of Climate, Diét, W; er | 
| Often the p Cause of | Diarrhoea |. 


Bubstitutd 
it, and be on the 
ear ahetetaie 


labor. . 
Prince Albert. National: Park, Bab: 
katchewan: Construction of buildings, 
museum, gatage, eee ‘and 
staf quarters, ania 


One-fifth, of ithe 


you. 
oe youre, "Prost ‘nous tal 


a Get pr, Fowler's” 
e wide. 


to, Ont. ‘ 


for heart diseasé<or dropsy. The|*T°S incentive ‘to, people to substi- 


and years. Wor engaged’ in dig 
ging 0 diten af @ found the) re 

_>| mains Of the t setae five feet; be- 
’” | neath-the suttace of thé gtojind. The 


+] waa. o 


-] have survived, and much of the 


Was In Two wo Rebellions 


Alberta Veteran “Carried Despatches | 
For General Strange 


In Alberta 50 years ago, when 
highwaymen were just fading from 
the western frontier with the coming 
of the first Northwest Mounted Pol- 
ice, and when Indians were still on 
the warpath often, Charles F. Stew- 
art drove the mail stage. Now 69 and 
retired, he lives at Edmonton. 

Native of the prairies, he saw two 
rebellions at first hand. Son of the 
chief factor of the Hudson's Bay Co., 
he was a lad of eight and lived a few 
miles below Fort Garry (later Winni- 
peg) in the troublous days of the 
first Red River rebellion. He can re- 
call seeing the soldiers coming up the 
Red river. As a youth of 20, wher 
the mails were stopped by the Sas- 
katchewan rebellion of 1885, he went 
on the courier line, carrying » dis- 
patches for General Strange’s Al- 
berta field force. He made several 
trips on horseback between Saddle 
Lake and Fort Pitt. 

His predecessor on the mail job, 
Peter Campbell, was on the driver's 
seat when the Calgary coach was 
held up and the mails robbed by 
highwaymen in the only casg of ay! 


pda iE — seein Ss ot oat Fri st ee sh ie Et hl Sen Sls 2 


kind in this part of the west. 

It was no picturesque coach that 
was in use in 1891 but a lumber 
wagon with an open centre for pack- 
age freight and a closed cabin on 
the rear that accommodated six pas- 
sengers. An average of 40 miles of 
trail was covered each day by the 
plodding team and numerous creeks 
and streams were forded en route, 


3 Proposed Tax On Noise 


Idea Of British ‘Minister Of Trans- 
port May Save Nerves 

‘A tax on noise is proposed to save 
the nerves of the people of the United 
Kingdom, At is thought that taxa- 
tion may succeed where all a 
have failed in the matter of unneces- 
sary noise, and the suggestion of a 
tax. was made in a letter from Les- 
lie Hore-Belisha, minister of trans- 


of the Anti-Noise League at Oxford. 


the road since January, 1933, have to 
‘be fitted with pneumatic. tires,” he 
wrote,-“and the scales of taxation 
have been so framed as to give a 


tute pneumatic tires on. existing ve- 
hicles. The heavy vehicle on solid 
tires which caused so much unneces- 
wary noise in the past is mys dis- 
appearing, . 

“Regulations also forbid the use of 
motor vehicles and trailers which 
have Caused’ éxcessive noise, and the 
+| Sounding of horns on stationary ve- 
hicles. 


ther to prohibit the use of the horn 
in prescribed hours and zoaes of, ,il- 
ence.” Mr. Hore-Belisha stated that 
in order to gain exact knowledge of 
what really #ausés noise the min- 
istry has invoked the best scientific 
asssitance. He expressed the lope 
the motor manufacturing industry}. 
will go-operate with the gove-nment 
in’ a determined effort to find a 
remedy for present .unnecessary and 
harmful noises. 


nk. Tinibers. Intpet_ After. Being 
Submerged Thousand Years 
A Vikitig boat “has been “recondi: 


tioned” “at Danzig, after one thous:| - 


sturdy oak planks of which the boat} ; 
y built had defied’ the 
ravages of time s0 ly that) - 
i6ohiaé Beei” possible to. reconstruct 
— rin dts entirety, 
»feet long, with places’ for 


with which the seams were packed 
make them water-tight is still in 


“All new heavy motor cars put on|- 


“The road traffic bill prop. »304 ‘fur- 5 


Rebuilding Vi Viking Boat a} 


The boat|' 


‘ About aie” 


Two Towns In Bulgaria Have Every- 
thing Else Beaten 

There is a legend current in the 
picturesque little Balkan town of 
Panaghurishte that when God once 
was bestowing his gifts, he allotted 
close-fistedness to the inhabitants of 
two towns—Gabrovo and Panaghur- 
ishte, stressing it more generously on 
the latter because of its weird and 
unpronounceable name, ~ 

On that account the parsimonious- 
ness of either town has become pro- 
verbial, And they are dire rivals in 
that ragpect to this day. 

In both localities men do not shave 
their beards, being too expensive a 
matter, but singe them by various 
devicés which makes the beard stay 
smooth. In both towns families 
make use of but one spoon or fork, 
passing either of them around when 
taking their meals which they argue, 
saves extra labor, and what is more 
important, food lasts longer, as each 
member of the household thus must 
await another turn for a mouthful. 

The aged people say that this 
method of eating prevents one from 


‘overeating, saves him from indiges- 


tion and many other stomach ail- 
ments, due, they assert, to the use of 
too many spoons, forks, knives, and 
too many dishes. 

In both towns hats and shoes are 
considered a superfluous luxury, 
which may be resorted to only in 
winter and on holidays. And even 
on those occasions people often pre- 
fer carrying their hats and shoes in 
their ‘hands to save tear and wear. 


Million Miles Her Objective 


Elderly Woman Traveller Expects te 
Make Real Record 

An interesting old lady who can 
probably lay good claim to the title 
of world's champion traveller is Mrs. 

G.. Munson of East way, 
Long Island, who has sailed from 
Montreal to add the Saguenay dis- 
trict to her list: of places visited. 
Mrs. Munson has travelled close to 
700,000 miles and at 72, hopes to 
bring her total to 1,000,000. — 

In all her travels, which include 
583 trips across the Atlantic and 10 
across the Pacific, Mrs. Munson has 
never encountered a severe storm nor 
an accident. She has tried almost 
every known method of transporta- 
tion, including camels, elephants and 
rickshaws, but has never yet been in 
a plane. Only one thing could induce 
her to fly, she said, and that was an 
invitation from Col. Charles A. Lind- 
bergh to go up with him. 

Mrs. Munson’s trips are seldom 
planned in advance, She stays at 
home until the urge to travel comes, 
then she packs her trunks and is off. 
“T can get ready to go around the 
world in 24 hours,” she said. 

Mrs. Munson was somewhat’ at a 
loss to explain her wanderlust, as her 
ten brothers and sisters are all 
“stay-at-home bodies,” but thought 
she might have inherited it from 
Captain John Munson, an ancestor 
‘who in 1642 led a pilgrimage of 
‘Munsons to Massachusetts. 

: Looked The Part 
_ He was a golfer who always played 
in his oldest clothes. One day he set 
cut’ for the course, his clubs slung 
over his | ‘shoulder, : 

‘Walking down .a street ‘he saw a 
“woman leaning over her garden gate, 
eing his approach angrily. 

“You're véry late,” she said, sharp- 
Wis as he. drew . level. j 

a 7”, “echoed the ‘astonished 
golfe 


“Yes, life} You promised’ to 
my chimneys vat eight, and It 
nine fils tad now.” — 


' ‘i Cand 
besarte 23 sa, 


s = ’ 


Bea ‘The World Wider 


Cunard White Star Liner To Make 
Interésting Calls At Many Ports 


Preliminary enquiries throughout 
America indicate that the 1935 
Around the World Cruise of the Cun- 
ard White Star liner Franconia will 
be well booked up, The Franconia 
will follow the route around the 
Southern Hemisphere as she has done 
during the past two seasons. The 
liner will leave New York on Satur- 
day, Jan. 12, and sail south for her 
first port of call at Kingston, Jamaica. 
Here there will be a drive to Spanish 
Town and other points of interest for 
passengers. Leaving Jamaica on the 
16th the Franconia arrives at Pana- 
ma on the 18th, calling at Cristobal. 
A daylight passage of the Panama 
Canal is made, with an auto drive to 
Colén, Ancon, Panama City and Old 
Panama. 

The Franconia calls at San Pedro 
in California to allow Westerners to 
embark for the cruise and also to 
permit passengers to drive to Los 
Angeles, Hollywood, Beverley Hills 
and other famous California resorts. 

Crossing the Pacific the Franconia 
will call- at the Hawatian Islands, 
where two days will be spent from 
Feb. 2 to Feb. 4. The itinerary here 
calls for tours to Hilo and Honolulu, 
the Lave Tubes, the Kilauea Volcano, 
the Fern Forest, Diamond Head and 
Waikiki Beach. An unusual call will 
be made in the Society Islands at Pa- 
peete (Tahiti). Here preparations are 
being made for entertainment and 
dancing by natives to amuse the pas- 
sengers. Cook Islands will be visited 
two days later and there will be a 
‘motor drive in the Island of Raro- 
tongo, with native dancing at 
Avarua. Recalling the late Louis 
Stevenson, a visit will be made to 
Vailima, his home in Apia in the 
Samoan Islands. The famous “Siva” 
or F srg dance will be performed in 
Apia, 

The Franconia then sails on to the 
Fiji Islands, with a motor drive into 
the interior where there will be 
“Mekes” or tribal dances performed. 
The Franconia will also visit Aus- 

Five days will be spent in 


Zealand; commencing with a 
tor drive from Auckland, a two 
aot ind. tour to rug and the 


Decline In Cheese Biperts 


Canada Is Losing Ms Market Of United 
Kingdom 

What has happened to Canada's 
exports of cheese to the market of 
the United Kingdom is clearly in- 
dicated in a statement of the Bureau 
of Statistics at Ottawa that during 
the first six months of the present 
year our shipments of cheese to that 
market actually fell to fifth place 
with only.30,842 owt. being forward- 
ed across the Atlantic. In contrast 
with this, New Zealand remained in 
first place in the British market with 
1,316,700, Australia being second with 
67,050, the Netherlands third with 
61,099 and Italy fourth with 50,928. 
Two years ago, for the correspond- 
ing period, Canada was in third place, 
coming behind New Zéaland and Hol- 
land, and prior to the war Canada's 
supply of cheese to Great Britain 
was more than double that of New 
Zealand. 

A further statement of the Bureau 
reports that during the year 1933 
Canada’s proguction of factory 
cheese experienced a further drop, 
totalling 111,044,628 pounds, or eight 
per cent. The total value of the 
cheese made was $11,113,918, a de- 
crease of two per cent., the average 
factory price per pound having ad- 
vanced from 9.44 cents in 1932 to 
10.01 cents in 1983.~ On the other 
hand, the production of creamery but- 
ter in the Dominion rose to 218,532,- 
807 pounds, an increase over the 
preceding year of two per cent. 

It is evident that Canada is con- 
tinuing to lose her grip upon the Bri- 
tish cheese market, where once she 
was supreme, and if things continue 
at the present rate it will be only a 
matter of time before she has been 
swept off that market by the force of 
New Zealand's competition.—Brock- 
ville Recorder and Times. 


Discover New Rays 


Eight Death-Dealing Rays Discovered 
By Woman Scientist 

Hight’ death-dealing rays of ultra- 
violet light have been identified by 
Dr. Florence E. Meier, young woman 
scientist of the Smithsonian Institu- 
tion: \ 

The work completed by Miss Meier, 
hailed as a valuable addition to the 
important study of animal reactions 


to various rays, reveals the new kil- 


ler rays as black sheep of the norm- 
ally beneficial violet ray group, which 
‘are known to cure rickets. 
Humans would not be slain by the 
newly discovered rays, but they ‘are 
death to green algae; the one- 
‘celled. plants that grow in lakes and 
rivers. 


Or Even A House 
“Automobile owners will leave 


the celebrated zoo. A special exhibi- 
tion of boomerang throwing will be 
arranged at the native settlement of 
La Peruse. There will be an optional 
two days trip over the Blue Moun- 
tains to Mount Victoria and the Jen- 
olan Caves. 

March 11 finds the Franconia at 
Port Moresby (Papua) New Guinea. 
A visit to the Papuan e at 
Hanabanda will include tribal 
by natives. Another unusual port 
of call for the Franconia will be in 
the Lesser Sunda Islands with a 
visit ashore at Kalabahai. A day or 
two will be spent in Bali at Telok 
reheng with visits to temples and 

cent scenic points. There will 
be an exhibition here of native arts 
and crafts and Balinese dancing. Two 
days will be spent in Java. There 
will be an auto drive around Sema- 
rang to Batavia and Buitenzorg, 
— the famous Botanical Gar- 

ns. 

The Franconia will call at Singa- 
pore, March 24, There will be visits 
to points of interest in the Malay 
Straits, the Botanical Gardens, for 
instance, and Penang Hill. The 
Franconia sets sail to South India, 
arriving at Madras on the 30th and 
calls at Ceylon early in April. There 
will be visits in and around Colombo 
and Mt.. Lavinia, as well as to pe 
and the Botanical Gardens; A 
port of call will be Port Victoria i 
the Seychelle Islands with a motor |; 
drive to the Islands of Mahe, where 
an exhibition of native arts and 
erafts has been arranged, Kenya 
Colony is next visited, with a call at 


their vehicles unlocked with keys at 
nd and then complain to the police 
when someone borrows or steals 
them,” remarks the St. Thoras 
Times-Journal. Well, why should it 
be necessary to lock a car, and not a 
horse and buggy? asks the Wood- 
stock Sentinel-Review. 


A new machine determines scien- 
tifically how sharp a razor blade is, 
how rauch it is dulled by use in 
shaving, and how successfully it can 
be p repair: 


ARE YOU ON A 
Diet? 

.. Te at pon : 

ANDREWS 

LIVER SALT 


The Franconia then makes a long 
voyage across the South Atlantic to 
the River Plate. The Franconia 
at Montevideo and in Uruguay 
Ppagsengers may visit Buenos Aires be 

steamer. north the 


sitter 
5 


gf 
& 


” al - 7 itp 


~ 


THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA 


Millions Of Acres Of Finest [tr 1 Ome A Poy Pel 


Wheat Lands In West To 
Come Under Reclamation Plan 


Reclamation of millions of acres of 
the finest wheat land in the world, | 
desolated by successive years of| More Readable Type For Printing | 
drouth, is the immediate object of Biblé Is Suggested | 
four governments in Canada, the fed- Church officials in convention at 
eral, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and| New Plymouth in New Zealand con- | 
Alberta. sidered the manner in which the} 

Plans have been laid already ‘to! Bible is arranged and printed, and 
relieve distress in the dried-out areas | their decision was that changes | 
of the prairies, feed the impoverished | Should be made. There were sugges- 
people, provide seed for next year’s, tions of brighter covers, a better ar- 
crops and look after millions of half-| rangement of the reading matter and 
starved cattle and horses. But there | perhaps the use of some illustrations. 
is another object in mind—how to re- Such things may be all right, but! 
claim for the land its binding and, we were taken wjth the suggestion 
freshness due to years of drouth. that there be more readable type) 

For months the Dominion depart- | used in printing the Bible. The New 
ment of agriculture has been experi-' Zealand folk were certain that the 
menting with grasses gathered from Book was too hard for people to read 
all parts of the world to determine because it was in nearly all cases 
the best to act as a binder to the printed in such small type. 
wind-tossed soil of the prairies. Agri-| That protest should be sustained, 
cultural experts” believe many narts says the Stratford Beacon-Herald. 
of the West never will regain their; The idea of the small print may be 
paramount place as wheat producers ‘ to keep the book within reasonable 
until the soil has been rebound and size, thus making -it easy to carry. 
rejuvenated. Eventually it may lead | But what is the use in making it easy 
to reforestation and irrigation on a/to carry and at the same time mak- 
wide scale, 

Some idea of the vastness of the 


Room For Improvement 


ing it hard to read? The average 
Bible is not nearly as easy to read a8 | 
problem may be gathered from these| newspapers, and the reason is that 
figures: In Manitoba, 1,000,000 acres | newspapers pay a great deal of at- 
in 13 municipalities affected by the | tention to securing the most read- 
drouth, Sixty per cent. of the culti-| able type faces. We hope the church 


vated acreage of Saskatchewan has| folk in New Zealand do something 
been dried out and 40 per cent. will! about it. 

not produce a marketable crop this 
year. The dry area in Alberta is. 


2,000,000 acres, a decrease from last | 


year. Some sections of the prairies 
have had five crop failures in a row. 

Agreements were signed last week 
between the Canadian railways, the 
federal government and the prairie | 
governments providing reduced rates 
on livestock feed move to the dry 
sections and cattle and ho.:es ship- 
ped to northern ranges. It will be 
impossible to transfer «Jl the half- 
starved stock from the dried-out 


_|out up to August 25. 


areas ‘and some are not worth the 
cost of feeding. It may result in 
wholesale slaughter of cattle to be 
processed into hog feed. 

A trickle of emigration has started 
from the dry sections Lut this is not 
regarded as practical cn any large 
scale. In Saskatchewan, for instance, 
40,000 families, probably 200,000 peo- 
ple, have farms in the drouth sec- 
tions. About 100 families have de- 
serted their farms in the south and 
selected new land in the north, but 
this movement is limited to the avail- 


ptf FA\> 


FS el 


good quality. In addition, western 
farmers are the world’s best optim- 
ists and, like everybody else, dislike 
leaving their settled farms. 

It is impossible to say how. much 
the Dominion will spend this year in 
drouth relief. It has been placed be- 
tween $15,000,000 and $20,000,000 in 
addition to direct relief for the peo- 
ple. It will be impossible to give an 
estimate until a decision is made on 
the campaign to reclaim the Jand and 
this is not expected for some time. 

The Dominion already has taken 
steps to thwart speculators in hay, 
due to the needs of the west and 
the small Canadian crop. It has pass- 
ed regulations forbidding the export 
of hay without license. This» will con- 
serve the Canadian supply in view 


| “Perpetual motion machines are the 


Reindeer In North 


Preparing Poultry For Shipment, Four Year Trek Expected To End 
Important Part Of Business This Fall | 
Producers’ poultry pools, where After a trek of four years across | 
farmers assemble, box pack and Alaska and the northern corner of 


make ready their own poultry, are|the Yukon, nearly 3,000 reindeer | 
growing in popularity and utility in} Which were purchased by the Cana- | 
practically every. province of the Do-! dian government in 1929, are now at| 


the west side of the delta of the| 
not a poultry pool in every district Mackenzie river in the Northwest) 
is because the farmers, however) Territories, and wait the coming of 
willing, have not had the time to find! Winter when they will cross the} 
out exactly how to proceed about the! mouth of the Mackenzie on the ice. | 
business. Markets pay a premium Under the direction of experienced 
for poultry of the highest auality,| reindeer herders the herd began the 
when properly graded, box packed,| arduous 1,000-mile journey across the 
and government inspected. roof of the world from Napaktoolek 

In all this work, the Poultry Ser-| in Western Alaska to the Mackenzie 
vices of the Dominion Department of | river delta in December, 1929. Early 
Agriculture play @ leading part, as-|in January, 1934, the herd started on 
sisting the farmers in «very way in| the 70-mile dash across the mouth 
organizing and carrying out the) of the Mackenzie from the west to 
working arrangement of pools. These| the east side, but once out on the | 
services have just issued a pamphlet] frozen river it was discovered that, | 
on why and how to organize a poul-| owing to the high winds and bliz-| 
try pool, and the pamphict is all the} zards which had prevailed during the 
more welcome to the many farmers winter, large stretches of the ice had 
interested in that it places the mat-| been blown clear of snow, and as the 
ter in a nutshell. It shows that the} deer cannot travel on glare ice it was 
assembling and preparing of poultry; necessary to make frequent and long 
for shipment is as much the business detours from the route origihally 
of producers as the actual growing selected in order to get footing for) 
of the birds, and the overhead ex-|the animals. To still further intensify | 
penses Of preparing for shipping is| the difficulties, after they had been 
largely governed by whether or not! out for more than 48 hours on the| 
eevry member of the pool does’ his ice a heavy blizzard arose and in the | 
share of the work. The steps to be; midst of this the deer stampeded 
taken to form a pool are clearly set} back along their trail to the grazing | 
forth. area near Shingle Point where they 
had spent last summer. 

Another attempt to cross the Mac- 
kenzie will be made in the autumn 
of this year when the delta freezes 
over again and with the selection of | 
another route across the ice, which | 
past experience indicates is more sat- 
isfactory, it is believed the herd will 
be safely delivered to the Department 
of the Intérior, who will place them 
on the winter grazing range to the 
east of the delta of the Mackenzie, 
and the work of building up a new) 
source of supply of food and clothing | 
for future generations of the Do- 
minion’s northern natives will begin. 


English Bakers Would 
Want Canadian Flour 


minion, and the reason why there is 


Aid U.S. Farmers 


Large Sums To Be Paid Out To Help 
Agriculturists In States 

More than $1,000,000,000 is destined 
to go into the pockets of United 
States farmers through the agricul- 
ture adjustment administration be- 
fore the end of 1935. 

Cotton, tobacco, wheat and corn- 
hog benefit payments will total $779,- 
402,000, officials estimated. Of this| 
sum $282,882,519.21 had been paid; 


ee 


Of the latter payments, cotton 
farmers have received the lion's 
share, $152,510,798. Wheat farmers 
netted $67,781,951; corn-hog farmers, 
$46,815,988, and tobacco growers, 
$15,773,785. , 

In addition to the $779,402,000— 
which is being paid out to farmers 
for controlling production — cattle 


A five-year’ plan“ is underway in 
Great Britain in an effort to add to 


Cs? rc RE ds ee wee 


raisers: will net about $120,000,000! the consumption of varieties of bread | mentioned. 


and sheépmen approximately $7,500,-| and in some way obtain price regula- 
000 by selling drouth-stricken ani-| tion, stated J. H. Merrett, of Cardiff, 
mals to the goyernment. This raises|one of 12 members of the National 
the total for farm adjustments close} Association of Master Bakers and 
to $1,000,0000,000. Confectioners visiting Canada. 

The figures do not include benefit 


is said - 

war had prevailed in Britain for the 
last two years. In the Manchester 
and Liverpool district, they said, un- 
til four months ago bread sold as 
low “as a penny a pound delivered 
to the door.” 

If the bakers can obtain a better 
price for their bread, they added, they 
will demand the higher quality flour 
from Canada. They declared the 


Inventors Seldom Get Rich 


Thousands Of Gadgets Are’ Never 
Granted A Patent 

A- window pane, which, on being 
broken by a burglar, creates an in- 
tense vacuum, drawing the hapless 
intruder into the room and holding 
him on the floor until captured, was 
among the 20,000 inventions of last ul 
year which were not granted patents. | their was not as high as it 
should be at present. . 


most popular, and about a hundred 
‘fresh’ discoveries of this kind are 
made every year,” a well-known firm 
of patent agents informed a repre- 
sentative. 


Grows Coffee Plants 
While on a trip through Michigan 
a year ago, a London, Ont., resident 
tasted coffee and peaches grown 
there. On his return he brought seeds 
of both plants. Now he has three 


Who knows but that as now power- 


; may be 


| Kamloops, B.C., 


oe | those interested 
If They Could Get Better Price For) lambs or in the purchase of ews un- 
Their Bread | der contract or otherwise may corre- 


percentage of Canddian wheat in/ysontana for their local herds, ac- 


Dates Back To. The Time Of 
The Earliest European Explorers 


Sheep In Western Canada 


New Government Map Shows Large 
Sheep Ranches 

A map showing the location of oll 
large sheep ranches in Western Can- 
ada has been prepared by the De- 
partment of the Interior at the in- 
stance of the Economics Branch of 
the Dominion Department of Agri- 
culture to assist sheep “anchers, 
farmers, and feeders to make con- 
tacts with one another. The map 
obtained from G,. 8. Her- 
ringer, sccretary of the South-west- 
ern Saskatchewan Wool Growers’ 
Association, Maple Creek, Sask.; N. 
T. McLeod, secretary of the Southern 
Alberta Sheep Breeders, Ltd, 1221 
2nd Ave., Lethbridge, Alta.; Miss M. 


| EK. Lauder, <ecretary, British Coium- 


bia Sheep Breeders’ Association, 
or the Economic$ 
Branch, Department of Agriculture, 
Ottawa. 

The purpose of the map is fo im: 
prove the contact between ranchers 
and those wishing to feed lambs or 
purchase sheep. It is pointed out 
that there is a considerable move- 
ment of such livestock from ranches 
to farms particularly during the fall 
of the year for feeding purposes. 
Lambs are often contracted to farm- 
ers and breeding ewes are sometimes 
sold to farmers on a poundage of 
lamb basis, Copies of standard con- 
tracts used for. such purposes may 
also be obtained upon request from 
those mentioned above. 

In the case of ewes purchased un- 
der contract it is the custom for the 
rancher to deal directly with the 
farmer. This makes it desirable that 
the farmer be located within driving 
distance or a maximum of approxi- 
mately fifty miles from the rancher 
with whom he is dealing. 

The location and address of sheep 
ranchers is given on the map and 
in the feeding of 


spond directly with ranchers or with 
the secretaries of the associations 


The preparation of this map is one 
of the results of an economic survey 
carried on in behalf of the sheep 
ranchers of Western Canada by the 
Economics Branch of the Department, 


, Both Mr. Merrett and William] of Agriculture with the co-o9+ration 
payments under the sugar program |Colljer of Le past president of) of the Dominion Experimental Farms 


Aid For Sheep Rieder 


Rambouillet Rams To Be Imported 
From Montana 


In order to improve the type of 
flocks by the ve ed, new 
blood, southern Alberta sheep breed- 


ers will receive Dominion aid in the 
purchase of Rambouillet rams ‘in 


cording to N..T. Macleod, secretary 
of.the Alberta Sheep Breeders’ Asso- 
|clation, The Southern Alberta and 
Southern Saskatchewan Sheep Grow- 
ers' Associations will share in the 
purchase and while the federal assist- 
ance will not meet the requirements 


A. A. Macmillan, head of the sheep 


of the breeders, it will be substantial. | ¢, 


The Republic of Panama, divided 

y the narrow canal zone strip, is 
one of the least known of the nations 
on the Western Hemisphere, and yet 
practically every school child knows 
of the Panama Canal, the great 
American - built, American - owned 
j waterway connecting the Atlantic 
|} with the Pacific. 

Panama the Republic is one of the 
infants of the New World, both in 
area and age, yet its history dates 
back to the time of the earliest 
European explorers of America. 

Columbus cruised in Panamanian 
bays on his fourth voyage in search 
of a short cut from Europe to 
Cathay. Balboe crossed this lean 
neck of land to discover the Pacific 
}ocean. Later it enjoyed high rank 
among. the leading Spanish colonies 
because rich men on the West coast 
of South America preferred to cross 
it rather than to “double” Cape Horn 
on their way to Burope. 

Panama's ‘real advancement; how- 
ever, dates, from 1903, when the 
country changed from a department 
of Colombia to an independent state. 

In 1902 the United States by treaty 
| offered to pay the government of 
| Colombia $10,000,000 in gold for con- 
cessions Which would make possible 
the building of a canal across Pana- 
ma and provided for an annuity of 
$250,000, beginning nine days after 
the ratification of this agreement. It 
further provided that the territory 
comprising the canal zone should be 
neutral and under the guarantee of 
both countries. 

The Colombian’ senate voted 
against the acceptance of the treaty, 
and as @ résult on November 4, 1903, 
Panama declared itself an independ- 
ent republic. The United States 
troops prevented the land of Colom- 
bian forces at Colon and Acapulco, 
and the new republic was formaily 
recognized by the United States on 
November 13, 1903. The treaty with 
the new republic was concluded a 
week later. , 

Under the treaty the Republic of 
Panama granted to the United 
States a zone of land ten miles in 
width and. extending five miles on 
either side of the centre of the canal, 
with’ the proviso that the cities of 
Panama and Colon should not be in- 
cluded within the grant. The com- 
pensation granted to Panama for 
this concession was the same as pro- 
vided i ; r Colom 
miles, with a population of 
million. 

Actual work on the canal was 
started in 1904, but little progress 
was made until 1907, when the work 
was turned over to the engineer 
corps of the regular army under the 
direction of General G. W. Goethals, 
under whose efficient administration 
the gigantic work was brought to a 
suddessful issue in August, 1914. 

Shapéd like a crawling caterpil- 
lar, with its head touching Costa 
Rica on the north and its tail reach- 
‘ southward to the forested moun- 
s of Colombia, Panama, equal in 
to the State of Maine, is known 
people beyond its borders be- 
its’ fame is overshadowed by 


half a 


asures 32,35 “squa’ e. 


of crop failures in the United States 
and Washington's removal of the $5 
a ton tariff. 


——— nr 


A Remarkable Test 


Wireless Telephone Talk Heard Dis- 
tinctly Over Extremely Long 
Distance 
Wireless telephone link has been 
established between India and Lon- 
don and recently a telephone con- 
versation between the Collector of 
Karachi and a London Post Office 
official was heard distinctly when the | 
first test was made of the proposed | 
wireless telephone service between, 
the two cities. This is remarkable, 
because the voice traverses 2,000 
miles of land line, via Lahore, Agra, 


the Kirkee wireless station. 


ful engines pull the freight cars, 
some day a powerful plane will pull 
half a dozen gliders at its heels— 
the freight train of the air. 


JACKET DRESSES ARE ALWAYS 
FAVORITES FOR IN-BETWEEN 
SEASON WEAR WITH 
SMART WOMEN 


You'll like to-day's model for its 
smart individuality. 

It is grey-blue, plaided in wine 
novelty rayon with woolen effect. 
Plain wine made the rever jacket 
collar, with wine button trim. 

The jacket is the youthful boxy 
type. The dress has easy to handle 
raglan sleeves. The bodice button- 
ing at the front, creates a very slim- 
ming line. Plaits lend animation to 
the slender skirt. 

Angora plaids in bright colors, 
crepe marocain, heavy novelty crepe 
silk, lightweight woolens, etc., are 


Lifeguards to the number of 4,000 
are on duty in England during the 


Style No. 484 is designed for sizes 


SPEEDY CANADIAN GIRLS CREATED NEW RECORD 


coffee plants and a peach vine, The 
peaches taste like Canadian-grown, 
but grow on a vine instead of a tree. 
There are no pits and are about the 
size of a goose egg. 


Lightning conductors will be fitted 


summer. More than 1,500 are women. | on historic trees in Czecho-Slovakia. 


portance to the world 7f the 
Pi Canal and the Panama Canal 


ng 


Time * ‘City, visited by nearly 


e passenger who debarks at 
on, from the frequent Mauretania 
cruises, the largest to call at Colon, 
is on Pacific side of the canal, 
find Panama City a shoppers’ 
sales. The bay is still a fisher-. 
mah’s paradise, “Panama”, in the 
native ‘Indian tongue, means “abund- 
ant fish”. 
When Morgan, the pirate, sacked 
old Panama City in 1671 more than 


| and swine division of the Ottawa gov- 
ernment has been in Montana and 
has spotted the rams from which it 
is expected W. S. Benson, field man 
for the Canadian Co-operative: ,Wool 
Growers’ Association, will make the 
final choice. The Dominion govern- 
ment will pay Mr. Benson's expenses 
and the freight from Montana to 
|the various destinations in Alberta 
|and Saskatchewan. The purchases 
are expected to total two car-loads. 


If there are still people who will 
invest in unknown stocks, on. the 
advice of someone they don't know 
on a telephone tip, their friends 
should watch them. With the new 
popularity of gold mine stocks, the 
telephone racketeers are busy again. 
It is not the old direct long distance 


loot previously looted from the 
natives of the Spaniards. 

The old city was founded in 1516 
and is the oldest town on the main- 
land of America, Tourists never, fail 


to visit the old cathedral, the tower 


14, 16, 18 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches 
| bust. See pattern envelope for ma- 
The Latest Umbrella | terial requirements. 

Umbrellas for shoppers have just; Price of pattern 20 cents in stamps 
appeared in London. The top of the or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap 
handle contains a dainty pencil. The| °°? carefully. 


entire handle may be turned and lift-| How To Order P 


ed to expose a surface on which} 
Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 


and Surat, before being sent out iy nice ideas for its development. 


made and easily deleted. 


shopping and other notes may be 
| 175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg 


There's always the bright side, | 
You can't poke the same finger into | 
an electric fan twice. m 


Pattern No........... Bize...... 


teen 


NO@me ...cereererreeereee tae 


PPeeeeeeeeeeeereeresren oeeee 


Gold, mixed with molten glass, pro- | 
duces the finest of all tinted glasses, 
@ rich, royal ruby. 


phone call scheme, it has local varia- 
tions, but is still a trap to sell shares 
to dupes ready to part with good 
money in blind hints on the advice 
of strangers over camouflaged | tele- 
phone calls--Brandon Sun. 


Only One Worthy 
Although he has been dead 84 
years, Henri de Balzac has just been 


French Society of Men of Letters, in 
Paris, has decided that no living 
writer was worthy to receive the 
The money will be 


of which still stands although the 
greater part of the church's walls 
\have fallen in. A tree is growing 
where the centre aisle used to be. 


Well Defined 
An English bishop has said that 
jhe is not sure what a beauty parlor 
is. A beauty parlor is a place where 


|@ woman is quite content to look her 


awarded a literary prize of, $625, The, worst for several hours 6n any day 


in which she wants to look her best 
for a few~minutes. 


— 


No person shall publish an untrue, 


hite City | given to the Balzac House in Paris. | deceptive, or misleading advertise- 


Tennyson took 17 years to write 
| nis famous poem, “In Memoriam”. 


ment in respect to eggs offered for 
siJe or distribution, says (he Cana- 
(dap egg’ regulations. 


> a? 


175 pack animals were needed to .. 
carry away the gold, silver and other » 


hare 
vege tee 


hala - iio Regiatiec Mi ae act! Ra i 


ro 


The Redcliff Review 


solsted Every Thareday 
At the Review office, Second Sirest, 


Sale ee 


— 


: THE REDCLIFF REVIEW THURSDAY, SEPT 20th 1984 


A. E. WARD, M. D. 
L, M. C. C. 
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 
Office and Residence in 


Leckwoed Block Phone 202 


THURSDAY, SEPT 20th 1984 


A PARABLE 


ee 


There are few people who 
have not heard the story of the 
renitent and his basket of feath- 
ers, but it bears repeating often 
for it is woven with the perman- 
ce of truth, Then, too,” there 


‘ re always those who have for- 


gotten and need to hear it again 
One day long ago there came 
{:- a man of holy orders. a pen‘. 
tent named Simon, whose mind 
was troubled. He had been 
guiliy of the sin of gossip, and 
from that sin a great evil had 
grown, and now, Simon, repent:- 
ant, had come to confess and 
Seek pardon. The holy man, 
who was also a wise man, heard 
fis tale and then, giving him a 
basket filled with feathers, bade 
kim go thrsugh the town and 
drop a feather into e:ch yard 
» pessed. When he had finish- 
e.] he was to return to the holy 
1 an with the empty basket. 
Through the ‘town Simon) 
went and when he had finished 


. he returned. “I have done what | 


vou told me to do, and now am 1 


lo be forgiven and my sins blott- From Stations Port Arthur, On. 


ed out?” he asked. 
“God. in his mercy may for. 


Five you, Simon, but your sin| | SEPT, 21to OCT. 2 


“But Father, I can never: do 
that for the wind has éattered 
“ay feathers to the four corners |. 
oi the earth.” 

“Tirue, mon, so with your 
forsip, You can never’ gatne; 
tp the mischief it has done, and 
ro, though you may be forgiven 
your sin cannot be blotted out” | 

It is an old story but there 
area always the seed scatterer | 
= ho need to hear it, for through 
country and town they go wit) 
* eir baskets filled with little 
winged seeds, gathering ard 
8 ettering. Few seed stay where 
t ey ate dropped, for the wind 
gatters them broadcast, and 
tiem them grow many uly 
plunts; vlants which are poisor- 
ous to man; dangerous-to All 
ie. Many of the seeds scatter- 
2 are harmless folk who scatt»: 
ry pass the time, forgetting thet 
g°csip is a sin. not a passtime 

Then, beyond condemnacio-., 
or those whe scatter seeds pore 

purpose. They realize 
bron of the wind and the 
prtency of the seed ani the 
g Wibitity of mankind in gener! 
avdso they fill their baskets 
v ith seeds from he most pois: 

, plants the earth can pr’ 
in Gad scatter them to th: 
fur winds of heaven with » 
pus face and an atmosphe ¢} 


Prime Rib Roast per Ib, Lic 
Pot Roast. Beef per Ib. 10c J | 
Shoulder of Lamb Ib... 12¢ | 
Boiling Beet per Ib......... 7¢ 


We Appreciate Your 
Patronage 


ANOTHER 
TRAVEL 


BARGAIN 


TO 


EASTERN 
CANADA 


and West, to 
Stations Sadbury and Fast 


Return Limit 
30 DAYS 


in addition to date of Gale 


VEGETABLES 
FOR SALE 


An Unlimited Supply of 


BANK OF CANADA 


CAPITAL $5,000,000 
Divided into 100,000 Shares of $50.00 Each 
The Minister of Finance, pursuant to the provisions of the Bank of Canada Act, offers 
for public subscription: 
100,000 Shares of the Capital Stock of the 
BANK OF CANADA 


Issue Price: $60.00 a Share 
PAYABLE AS FOLLOWS: 


On Application - $12.5¢ a Share 
On Jon. 32,1935 - $37.50 2 Share 


The Bank of Canada has been incorporated by the Parliament of Canada and given 

© powers to operate as a central b: of issue and rediscount for Canada. 

The Bank is authorized to pay cumulative dividends from its profits, after provision 

for expenses, depreciation, etc., at the rate of 44% per annum, payable half-yearly. Surplus 
ofits are to be applied to the rest fund of the B or paid into the Consolidated Revenue 

Fund as provided ty the Bank of Canada Act. 


wid 


Not more than 50 shares may be held by or for the benefit of any one person. Share- 
holders must be British subjects ordinarily resident in Canada or corporations organized 
rag Dominion or provincial laws and controlled by British subjects ordinarily resident 
in Canada. 

pe age sean should be mailed to the Minister of Finance, Ottawa, in envelopes marked 
“ Bank of Canada Shares.” 

Payment must be made by a certified cheque on a chartered bank or by a bank draft 
or post office or express company money order, payable to the Receiver General of Canada. 

As soon as possible after subscriptions have been received, allotments will be made 
pew te na of the allotment will be mailed to the post office address furnished by the 
su 


Further K eb ge og will be found in the official 
may be obtained at the Department of Finance, ¢ offices of the Assistant Receivers 
General, post offices, any branch of any chartered bank, and other financial institutions. 


‘ospectus and application form which 
The Subscription List will open on September 17, 1984, and close on or before September 21, 1934, 
with or without notice, at the discretion of the Minister of Finance, 


Derasrausyr oF Finance, Orsawa, 
Serremere 17, 1994, 


The proposition of W. Osbor- 
r, to build a dance pavilion at 
Folice Point was turned down 
by the Medicine Hat Council. 
— eee 


Dry Cleaning 
Done in Town 


SP CeSS OSES SOLOS OOOEOOES 


THE NEW 
CLUB CAFE 


en nn cc en 


3/8 3/3 3 
$/3 $13 3 
sie ele © 
bar eje e 
aie e|e e 
3/8 HA ; 
e\e ry 
3] 2nd St. S. B. Modicine Hat 3/3 Get Your Old Clothes $|| WM. HENDERSON 
Green Corn, Cabbage, Cu- $/8 $|$ Cleaned Up For Spring $/| Issuer of Marriage Licenses 
pens, Potatads, Onivots 18 313 w, Poibieel to Dest FIRE INSURANCE 
cumbers, , $13 When in the city for bust- 3/3 ""° “tr 'repa > $|] Rent collections attended to 
Beets Turnips, Onions, ‘ 3 ness or pleasure, make our : : H Office at Residence 2nd St. 
Peppe-s, Cauliflowers, $13 Cafe your Headquarters 2|$ SUITS, OVERCOATS 3) —————_-____—___— 
Parsnips, Celery s/s $|3 © and PLAIN DRESSES H ! 
: 313 ae See er 33 For $1.25 s|| Lang Bros. Ltd. 
Winter Cabbage s A o,e Pee oe 
100 Ws. fOr iiss 952 H H and at Reasonable Prices ; 3 Gong Seley Ein een nopes . INSURANCE | 
Per Ton at: ni. $16.00 siheiacat ate i ; GIVE Us vA TRIAL 3 peti” Kecsene* 
WOO HONG bervie and Accommodation $/3 TL EUING BROS: 3]|  tife Sickness 
Store Opposite Post Office 3/8 rie NEW CLUB CAFE $|$ Fourh St Next Town Hall $||| 651 2nd St. Medicine Hat 
e 


GET YOUR CAR 
AND TRUCK REPAIRS 


SOOSCOHHOSSOHSHSEHSESCSEECE 


When in the city-for the Big 
Celebration Sept. 27, 28, 29 


We have a complete stock of all Accessories 
’ AT REASONABLE PRICES 


Your car will be attended to here by Competent 


Workmen. Best Quality Gas and Oils 


Dry Cleaning 


Have Your Scuffed Clothes Made 


Like New Ones 


Sadie: Ovcnssnde oid Piiiiasiens 
Dry Cleaned and Pressed $1.25 


BENY’S GARAGE, Medicine Hat 


By Up-to-date Plant in Medicine Hat 


Orders Left at 


A. McGIMPSEY’S, Redcliff 


Will be Promptly Attended to 
Goods Called For 
and Delivered 


. 24 Hour 
‘Servi 


Telephone 3554 


Get Your Job Printing © 
At The Review Office 
No Job Too Big nor None Too Small 


for us to handle 


ENVELOPES 

LETTERHEADS = 38 
NOTE HEADS 
BILLHEADS 
STATEMENTS 
CIRCULARS 
BOOKLETS 

PRIZE LISTS 
TICKETS 
VISITING CARDS 
BUSINESS CARDS 
PROGRAMS 
RULED FORMS 
BALANCE SHEETS 
DODGERS 
POSTERS 
AUCTION BILLS » 


Let the People Know what you have to sell, by 
_ ADVERTISING IN THE REVIEW 


Leave Your 
‘Orders Here 
For The 
Following 


Satisfaction 
Guaranteed 


and Prices 


Reasonable 


EAN TIN: TES Ai aies a ni 


Britain’ s Motor Car Tax! 


Average About “9150, And Is Highest 
In World 

There is only one private or com- 
mercial motor vehicle in the United 
Kingdom to every 27 of the popula- 
tion, a long way below the Canadian 
percentage. The industry, however, 
is overcoming the handicap of United 
States mass production, which, des 
veloping during and after the war, 
gave that country the jump in the 
the home and foreign markets, in- 
cluding Canada. Ten years ago, Great 
Britain produced 71,396 motor 
vehicles, Last year the number was 
220,775. 

More than one million people are 
employed in the manufacture, main- 
tenance and operation of British cars, 
and more than one-ténth of the na- 
tional taxation is derived from motor 
licenses and gasoline, the figure 
being about $37,000,000. Taxes on 
cars are placed upon the basis of 
about $12.50 per horse power, and as 
the average British car is 12% horse- 
power, the average car tax is $150. 
You know what the car tax is in 
Canada. To offset the tax, British 
engineers have developed motors that 


consume -very.-little gasoline, andj, 


most cars run from 40 to 50 miles per 
gallon. The British license fee is in 
fact the highest in the world, and so 
long as it remains anywhere near its 
present figure, will hamper the in- 
dustry. 

Britain, is fully alive, however, to 
the importance of the automobile 
trade, and in spite of the huge sums 
spent on roads in the Dominion, it 
almost staggers the imagination to 
know that last year the nation spent 

_ $400,000,000 on roads and bridges. 

And Great Britain is less than one- 
quarter the area of Ontario.—St. 
Thomas Times-Journal. 


Seven-Foot .Wheat 


Grown In England From Old Seed 
Brought From India 


~ Might Make “ illctianien ‘ 


if Children Knew How Negtect Hurts 
Their Parents 


It happened the other day in the 
old home town. A man standing on 


the corner across from the post-office | push their demand for the legal right | 


noticed an old resident going in and 
coming out without any mail. He 
said something about him and it was 
this: 

“There goes old Archie. You know 
he used to farm about six miles out 
until his wife died and the children 
all moved away. Then he took up a 


Officials of the Indian government | little place just on the edge of the 


dug into a 5,000-year-old Mogul tom) 
and found a handful of wheat. 

They planted one ounce of it in 
England. And behold every seed 
germinated and sent up a lusty shoot 
to an average of Beven feet. 

_ It is a great discovery. 

It is stimulating to the imagina- 
tion to learn that the farmers of In- 
dia, 5,000 years ago, could produce 
wheat in every way superior to the 
scientific product of 1934. - 

_ The new wheat will doubtless add 


The skull is that of barosaurus, 4 
huge and little-known dinosaur of 
which there is no complete fosgil in 


They look like sections of a stove 
pipe. 
\ The Retort Courteous 

A lady much above the usual size 
was trying to enter a street car. A 
passenger who was waiting to get 
off, began to laugh at her futile 
efforts, : 

“If you were half a man, you'd | 

help me on this street car,” snapped 
' the fat lady. 

The passenger retorted, “Madam, if 
you were half a lady, you wouldn't 
need any help.” 


It Wouldn't Work 
A Toronto minister suggests that 
editors and preachers should ex- 
change jobs now and again. ‘What, 
and have people fall asleep over their | 
newspapers and listen to typographi- | 


town with about an acre of ground, 
and he lives alone there. There were 
four boys and three girls in the fam- 
ily, and he did the best he could by 
them in the way of schooling and 
they are all doing fairly well. The 
girls are all married and have good 
homes, too;,but they are all some 
distance away from here. Archie 
comes down to the post office every 
day after the train has come in and 
he’s: been. doing it every day for a 
jong time. He told me once he was 


there is a week goes by that he 
doesn't get the town paper and mark 
it here and there with the names of 
-people his children would know, and 


‘he stands over there at the ‘counter 


in the post office and carefully wraps 


'|them up to’ send away. But he comes} ,, 


and goes day after day always nop-| 
ing for a letter. Very seldom one 
comes but when it does Archie is the 
happiest man in town.” : 
There is little need to comment on 
that little picture. Old Archie, as 
he came to be known in the town to 
distinguish him from his son, “Young 
Archie,” walks rather slow now, He'd 
go back to his little home where he 
would be alone. His children probably 
have families of their own and their 
own circle of friends and perhaps 
they would believe it themselves if 
they said they had no time to write 
home, if they had seen old Archie 
coming to the post office and turn- 
ing away empty handed, and if they 
kcnew that he did this day after day 
. . in good. weather and rough 
. . » Well, they might see things dif- 
ferently—Stratford Beacon-Herald. 


- 


A Budding Diplomat 

That a certain young man is wise 
beyond his years was proved when 
he paused before answering a widow 
who had asked him to guess her age. 

“You must have some idea,” she 
said, 

“T have several ideas,” said the 
young man with a smile. “The only 
trouble is that I hesitate whether to 
make you 10 years younger on ac- 
| count of your looks or 10 years older 
| on account of your intelligence.” 


| Battleships Of Glass 
Contending that battleships could 
be made invisible from sea and air if 


cal errors from the pulpit?” "4 the | made of glass, an ambitious inventor 


Border Cities Star. 


Schoolmaster — “This makes the 
fifth time I have punished you this 
week.. What have you to say?” 

Bobby—'T am glad it's Friday, 
air.” 


is trying to interest officials of the 
United States navy to melt all avail- 
able glassware, incli beer bottles, 
for an immediate start on the con- 
struction of such ships, 


About 25,000 telephones are con- 
nected or disconnected in the U.8. on 
the average, each working day. 

No one could make a fool of you 
if you weren't suitable material for 
the job. 


The belfry of the Cloth Hall at Ypres, Belgium, familiar spot to thousands of Canadians, when it was then a 
mass of ruins, has been resurrected, to the great joy of the inhabitants of Ypres. 
when the King of the Belgians went to Ypres for the opening ceremonies. 
scene in front of the Cloth Hall with the new belfry on the left. 
arrives with the Prime Minister for the cermonies, 


| mot hasten his end. . 


eagiekingly opposed to’ suicide,” he front with proper lines of demarca- 


FAMOUS BELFRY AT YPRES RISES FROM WAR RUINS 


Tragic Love Affair 
Interesting Page Taken From The 
Early History Of Canada 

There are in the history of the dis- 
covery of Canada certain figures 
which we must save from oblivion. 
Less distinct perhaps than that of the 
great explorer from St. Malo, Jacques 
Cartier, they stand out in the dim 
light of that implacable night. 

On pages yellowed by centuries, in 
the strange letters of a past age, 
with great flourishes to the capitals, 
the only existing account is preserv- 
ed. In words simple and frank An- 
dre Thevet, “geographer to the king” 
in his “Cosmographic . Universelle” 
relate the tale in the second volume, | 
published by Pierre I'Huillier, in old| 
Rue St. Jacques, Paris, in 1575. 

On the 16th of April, 1542, Jean 
Francois. de la Rocque Sieur de) 
Roberval, set sails with three vessels | 
and 200 persons from the port of La} 
Rochelle, It was a goodly company, 
some women, among them the damoi- 
selle Marguerite de Roberval; gentle- 
men of the court, artisans of all 
kinds, men freed from the prisons 


| claimed “Papooses like ducks.” 


and even galley slaves, expect in the 
new world a happiness hitherto un- 
known. in the old, 

It is not long until a love idyl 
These pictures were taken; begins between Gaston de Ruvert, 
The main picture shows a general/a courtier, 27 years old, and the 
At the right, inset, the King of the Belgians | damoiselle de Roberval. Then some- 
one tells the captain. Marguerite is 


Se — = nme | His niece. They are opposite Demon 

* ° island, the terror of lone fishermen. 

Weary Of Life | Becoming Important Port A small boat puts out from the gal- 

‘ leon and Marguerite and her old 

Issue Of Legal Right To End Vancouver Has Big Future, Opinion| servant are put ashore on the dread- 


Suffering Is Again Revived Of Major Swan ed isle. 


Physicians, stirred by the plea of | Vast future devélopment of Greater} Gaston jumps into the sea, rejoins 
an 83-year-old man, are planning to Wancouver’s harbor facilities wren Marguerite and her servant on De- 


| foreshadowed by Major W. G. Swan} mon island and the world forgets 
to end hopeless suffering by an over-) of the Engineering Institute of Can-| them. Then a child is born. He lives 
dose of sleeping powder. _ ada. to smile his enchanted smile at ‘the 
The long discussed moral question:| Dealing with Vancouver's inner and| new world, and then, as his father 
Has a physician the right to kill?) outer harbor and with the mouth of | and nurse have already done, he dies. 
was revived by the plea of the former | the Fraser river, Mr. Swan described Marguerite was rescued and taken 
magistrate of Grant, in Franz Joseph pijans of railway, highway, bridge| back to France two years later. An- 
Land. {and dam development that would|dre Thevet, geographer to the king, 
Fifty years ago his vigor was equal | Place this seaport to the fore among| got the story from her own lips, She 
to the exploration of the Arctic, and world ports. spoke often of a gulf encircled in 
it was he who named Cape Grant in} Joint interests in connection with| green hills, and of a deep clear lake 
Franz Joseph Land. Last January | the port business of Vancouver, New| where she used to go at twilight to 
he was told by his doctors that his ; Westminster and North Fraser will,| see the clouds reflected in it. Of her 
condition was hopeless and that he| ne believed, become so intermingled | child these were her words: “He went, 
would soon die. as to make advisable the setting up| following the route of Damieme and 
He at once invited 500 friends to! o¢ one port authority in the entire| my dear love.” 


a party which he called his “swan} grea. 
Cannot Be Tamed 


song”. Then ‘he took a long cruise} “As part of a town plan for a sea- 

some 50 miles up the Amazon and port,” Major Swan declared, “there 

omy to his home in London to} ig a rightful demand that future de-| Apiculturist Says: Bee Has: Dispos!- 
velopment of the waterfront facilities tion Like Jungle Tiger 

; In a letter published recently hé! | Should recognize proper access’ for Just? try getApsne a@ bee“and see 

deplored the fact that ib pipetions wilt! ithe free movement of -freight and| \, j 


take with joy a double dore of sleep- the rbed for adequate railway facili- 
ing powder—1 who suffer without. re- ‘fies. ‘There should ‘be; if possible, a 
Hef and whose eyes can read no ynified control for the operation of a rs 
more! © waterfront or terminal railway. 

“And yet, that 1s an initiative that) The plan should provide for the 
I could not take by myself, for I am systematic development of the water- 


Although. the bee is domesticated 
the sense that he will occupy a 
man-made hive, the taming has 
stopped right there and he has the 
‘temperament of a jungle tiger, bee 
experts will tell you. . 

“Bees never come to know their 
owner,” says James Hambleton, 
apiculturist in the bureau, ‘of ento- 
mology. “Every person who works 
with bees will get ‘stung occasion- 
ally. 

“The layman who is stung most 
often is probably nervous and afraid 
of bees. Apiarists are well aware 
that their bees never get to know 
them. One who understands bees can 
work as safely in another apiary as 


tion between deep sea, coastwise, in- 
dustrial and recreational waterfront 
facilities. 
“Waterfront roadways should be 
Electricians Found * Too Late That, Provided which allow ‘direct’ connec- 
Rush Order Was Unnecessary | tion between various portions of the 
Down at the Hotel Pennsylvania | harbor front and which enable city 
one afternoon not long ago, the am- re, police, ambulance, and other ser- 
plifying system. in the main banquet viol to operate with the greatest 
hall was found to be badly out of | “spateh.” 
order, and since a convention was Se 
scheduled for the next day, the chiet| “Are you going to study singing, 
electrician and his helpers worked all| #3 you intended?” in his own.” : 
night putting things to right. It was| “No, 1 gave up the, idea when the; Regardless of the jungle tempera- 
only a few hours before the conven- teacher convinced me it would take| ment, the bees will sting only when 
tion was to start that they went three years of hard work to enable! he pelieves there is no other way out, 
home wearily to bed, leaving the|me to sing as well as I thought I) pee specialists say. 
mikes in shape. They didn’t get mad | Sng already.” Worker bees, which do the sting- 
till they woke up, and learned what ing, do so only in defence of their 
the convention was—-the National One gram of radium contains} hive. Away from their hives bees are 
Association of the Deaf.—-The New| enough power to lift a 28,000-ton|jntent upon their work.and can 
Yorker. vessel 100 feet in the air. scarcely be induced to sting. 


Good Word For The Farm 


_| Interesting Work And Usually En- 

sures Competency For Old Age 

It has become the fashion lately 
to decry farming. Now farming is 
not all é¢ase and profit, No, farming 
involves a deal of hard work. But 
when all is said and done there is no 
more interesting pursuit than agri- 
culture. No job more than farming 
well done ensures one a competency 
at three score years and ten, Under 
the shining sun there és no more hon- 
est thing than the land. Under 
modern conditions farming is not 
slavish work, Every stroke of labor 
the farmer does is made in his own 
interest. Like all others, he buys and 
sells on the open market. More than 
any other worker he has a privilege 
of arranging his day's work and tak- 
ing a holiday at his sweet will. Like 
all others he must take the bitter 
with the sweet, but more than other 
workers he can proceed on the law 
of averages. —- Exeter Times-Advo- 
cate. ee 


The average lazy man is too lazy 
to worry about his laziness, 


Had A Good sood Grievance 


Need Gradual Approach 


People Cannot Grasp Great Inven- 
tions Without Preparation 

There\is a quaint ingenuousness 
about the 73-year-old Indian in Bri- 
tish Columbia, who gathered in .20 or 
30 horses and then tried to sell them 
to their proper owner, with the re- 
sult that he was committed to a term 
in jail. He had spent all his life in 
the wild and had never seen even a 
locomotive. Cities were unknown to 
him and all the modern inventions 
were just so many miracles. His 
eyes were in danger of popping out 
6f his head as each new marvel was 
revealed to him. 

The steamer on which he was car- 
ried to Vancouver astonished him, 
and when he came to the city, with 
its huge buildings and its hurrying 


| crowds, he was amazed and speech- 


less. Taken to the parks he saw chil- 
dren playing in the pools and ex- 
He 
could not understand the trolley cars 
and wanted to know how they moved. 
An attempt was made to explain, but 
it was lost upon him. All he could 
perceive was “little wheel make big 
wheel go round,” and probably thia 
was as satisfactory to him and as in- 
telligible as a more complicated one 
about electricity would be to the 
average man. 

The condition of this man, regard- 
ed as sufficiently intelligent in his 
own environment, may be compared 
with. the mind of a’ century ago, in 
the person of any ordinary man of 
intelligence, if he could have been 
plunged all at once into the science 
and inventions of the present day. 
Or, let us say, if the man of to-day, 
knowing ‘what he knows, could sud- 
denly be placed in the world that will 
be a century hence. 

Such sudden transports are more 
than the ordinary mind can grapple 
with. We need a gradual approach. 
The same thing is true of any sud- 
den transition from one state of 
consciousness to another and will ex- 
plain many phases of lunacy, 80+ 
called, and other forms of mania. 

Immature minds refuse to aiter 
their grip of. things and insist that 
they remain in the status. ‘quo. They 
cling to the delusion that because 
they do not wish for a change, there- 
fore no change should be thrust upon 
them, and their persistent refusal to 
face new facts and conditions often 
creates a sad problem for their rela- 
tives. They have not even the adapt- 
ability of this old Indian, who will 
probably accept his commitment to 


venture. 
, 


Gini Lew 


British Columbia 0 Official sea ws 
That U.S. Adopt Canadian 
Police System. » 
Thomas W. 8S. Parsons, assistant 
commissioner of the British Colum- 
bia provincial police, at a sectional 
meeting preceding the opening of the 


American Bar Association's annual © 


convention, at Milwaukee, proposed 
that the United States adopt the 
Canadian system of provincial police 
in each state, with some form of na- 
tional police to assist in tracking 
down criminals, 

He advocated a single national 
criminal law under which a warrant 
would be valid in any part of the 
country. Canadians, he said, cannot 
grasp the idea of extradition as be- 
tween states. 

Parsons advanced a plan under 
which regional police training schools, 
operated. by the federal government, 
would be established. Each state 
would send its officers there for in- 
struction. 


Many Seek Homesteads 


Alberta Entries 200 Ahead Of Pre- 
vious Fiscal Year 

Homestead business in Alberta for 
the past fiscal year was ahead of 
that for the preceding period by 200 
entries, according to the annual re- 
port just issued by the lands branch. 
Entries from April 1, 1933, to March 
81, 1934, were 3,706, as compared 
with 3,499 in 1932-33, 

First homesteads numbered 2,984 
for the year, and second homesteads 
were 696. There were 26 soldiers’ 
grants, No less thah 1,011 of the en- 
tries were made by women. 

Close to one-third of the entrants 
during the year were Canadian-born, 
as shown by a table of origins. Out 
of the total 3,706, Canada is given 
as the birthplace of 1,208, with 580 
of these from Alberta and 276, the 
next largest, from Ontario. 


Teacher—Willie, why do you write 
“Bank” with a large B? 

Willie—Because daddie said a bank 
was no good unless it had a large 


capital. 


_About 100 persons die every year 
in the United States from rabies. 


Se LE CN OR SER i a ether 


il as a novel and interesting ad- 


ag RER Ea 


i ps eee etignn ind 


~ em 


} 
$ 
}. 
i 


‘for China’s seat in the assembly. 


WORLD HAPPENINGS 
BRIEFLY TOLD 


“"' President Roosevelt has received a 

report saying employment in United 
States has increased 4,120,000 since 
he took office. 

Dr. J. A. MacArthur, 86, piorieer 
leader of the medical profession in 
Manitoba for more than half a cen- 
tury, died recently in Winnipeg. 

Extension of the recommendation) 
system to supplant examinations in 
the schools was urged by Duncan 
McArthur, deputy minister of educa; | 
tion for Ontario. 

Veteran of both the Boer war and 
the Great War and former Arctic 
trader, Major M. Montague Marsden, 
62, is dead at Vancouver from a 
heart infection. 


The Australian cabinet considered 


British protests against the new im- 
port duties on Lancashire textiles 
and ruled the tariffs are to be main- 
tained. 

The Indian government's ban on 
flying over the northwest frontier 
will lengthen the London to — 
hourne. air race in, October by 1,000 
miles, 

Henri Gagnon, Quebec, president of 
the Canadian Press, and managing 
director of the newspaper Le Soleil, 
has been elevated to the rank of an 
officer of the Legion of Honor of 
France, 

Persia has informed the League of 
Nations it will stand as a candidate 


China’s mandate expires this year 
and Persia considers itself qualified 
to represent Asia. 

Captains of Great Lakes steamers 
say low water levels in the lakes 
have uncovered rocks and ‘sandbars, 
and cargoes have had to be consider- 
ably reduced from other seasons. Ves- 
sels have grounded this summer in 


places previously considered safe, 
they declared, and the captains had 
to stay on the bridge continuously. 


Cheap Television Sets 


New System Developed Promises | 


, Sets At Low Cost 


A new system invented by Mr. R. 
W. Hughes, of Plymouth, England, 
may result soon in the production of 
cheap television sets for all. 

Mr. Hughes said he thought a tele- 
vision receiver, built with light 
source and amplifier, could be mass 
produced to sell at £10 or less. 

With his somewhat crudely-con- 
structed apparatus, Mr. Hughes is 
able to project a 100-line picture on a 
screen two feet square. 

A system of vibrating mirrors 
causes a small but instant spot of 
light to travel over the screen and 
form the images. 

Mr. Hughes is also developing an 
apparatus which, he claims, over- 
comes the problem of synchronizing 
one of the chief difficulties of tele- 
vision—and also holds the picture 
steady for considerable periods. 

Firms in this country as well as 
in Germany and the United States 
have been interested in the invention, 
and, it is said, that successful nego- 
tiations have been coricluded with a 
British company. 

Mr. Hughes has been working for 
nearly two years on his new ap- 
paratus and has built a special trans- 


mitter to test his receiving apparatus : 


at any time. 


Must Be Improved 


Canada Must Raise Better Hogs To 
Capture Market 

The Canadian farmer lost $12,000,- 
000 in 1933 by reason of the fact 
Danish hogs were better than Cana- 
dian hogs, J. 8. McLean, president of 
Canada Packers, says in the annual 
report. Unless Canadian hogs are 
improved, he said, the same amount 
will be lost each year. 

“The securing of this $12,000,000 
Hes in the hands of the Canadian 
farmer,” he continued. “He alone 
ean do the job, And if it is done, 
he will reap the entire benefit.” The 
“certain lack of confidence” existing 
between the farmer and the packer 
was due chiefly to the farmer. 


‘ Stay Was Uncertain 

A social worker on her first visit 
to a prison was greatly impressed by 
the sorrowful attitude of one man 
she found. “My poor man,” she sym- 
pathized, “what is the length of time 
you'll spend here?” , | 

“All depends on politics, lady,” re- 
plied the mournful one. “I’m the 
warden.” 


The first merry-go-round at Coney 
Island was introduced by the grand- 
father of George Raft. ; 

Seven thousand stars can be seen 
by a person with average sight. 
LLL 
W. N. U. 2062 


The White Sea Canal 
Has Provided Leningrad With 
Cheaper Means Of Transport 

One of the most revolutionary ac- 
complishments of the Soviet Union 
is the construction of the White Sea 
Canal connecting the Baltic and the 
White Sea, Heretofore Russia had 
two water routes leading to Europe 
—one by way of the Black Sea, the 
other by way of the Baltic--and both 
could be blockaded. : 

Now, however, Leningrad can ho 
longer be shut off from the outer 
world by a blockade of the Baltic, for 
ships of commerce or war can make 
their way northward by the new 
canal to the White Sea and sail 
around Sweden and Norway. Not 
only will Leningrad become more im- 
portant, but a district rich in phos- 
phates, iron ore and lumber will be 
able to ship its products fat more 
economically than ever before. 

Sy 


Nobleman Runs Coffee Stall 


Duke Of Manchester's Son Hopes To 
Start Chain 


| 


|| +A VETERAN JOURNALIST 


a } 

John R. Dougall, for 63 years 
editor-in-chief of the Weekly Wit- 
ness, of Montreal, and for 73 years a 
journalist, celebrated his ninety-third 
birthday on August 17th. He is the 
last remaining editorial link with 


Lord Edward Montagu, second son 
of Duke of Manchester, the London 
Express. sajd, is running an outdoor 
refreshment stall at Maidenhead, 
famous ‘Thames riverside resort 
where there are many country clubs. 

His “coffee stall” is mounted on 
the chassis of an automobile, from 
which he serves coffee, other soft 
drinks, sausages and sandwiches. 
Most of his patronage is from taxi 
drivers and chauffeurs who bring 
clubmen to Maidenhead from London. 

Lord Edward, who is 28 and a 
former rancher in the Canadian West, 
told a reporter Me started his busi- 
ness with £1 (about $5) in cash and 
made $4 within 24 hours. He hopes 
to. start a chain of stalls, he asserted. 


De 
Se 


COC. pe 


. 
“ih. 
< 


o) 


A PRETTY HOME FROCK WITH 

WRAP-OVER SLIMMING LINES 

—SIMPLE TO MAKE 

‘The very charming model shown 
for to-day’s pattern is in printed cot- 
ton in yellow and white with white 
collar and pocket. 

It’s the favored wrap-over type so 
casy to slip into. 

While extremely attractive for a 
normal re, this model is also 
quite suitable for heavier figures. 
The — meres + on a dd 
skirt, very slen : 

Another charming scheme for this 
model is multicolored checked seer- 
sucker with the collar and pocket of 
navy blue linen. 

Style No. 499 is designed for sizes 
16, 18 years, 36, 88 and 40 inches 
bust. See pattern envelope for ma- 
terial requirements. 

Price of pattern 20 cents in stamps 
or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap 
coin carefully. 


How To Order Patterns 
Addres®: Winnipeg Ni 


e r Uni 
175 McDermot Ave. Winnipeg” 


Pattern No, mare Blze.. 


Name ee 
2 — 
Cee ee re 8 8 me me me me mr ewer se 


Town om home oe me me eee men eseesem 


Ce ee | 


pre-confederation days. 


Pirates Bold 


Are Now Incorporated Into The 
Chinese Army 

The pirates are soldiers how. Thus 
has fate dealt with the 60 Chinese 
marine marauders who were promised 
a firing squad for creating an inter- 
national incident two months ago. 
The pirates boldly commandeered the 
British steamer Shuntien and _ kid- 
napped six British subjects and 18 
Chinese. 

The pirates were frightened into 
freeing their captives and lost most 
of the loot they waloaded from the 
steamer. But the pay-off” is that they 
have been taken into the Shantung 
provincial army. 

“They were sincere in their desire 
to surrender and become soldiers,” 
explained Han Fu-Chu, governor of 
the province, who consented to make 
the pirates part of his army. 

A “sweeping search” for the kid- 
nappers was ordered when both 


Becoming Good Customer 


Bahama Islands Are Taking More 
Goods From Canada. 

The Bahamas have become one of 
Canada’s best customers, imports 
from the Dominion now ranking first 
place. The total value of goods 
bought from Canada is $1,305,790, 
an increase of 5.5 per cent. over the 


potatoes used there come from Can- 
ada. Canada is also the chief sup- 
plier of butter, flour, oats, condensed 
milk, rubber and canvas boots and 
shoes. Last year the United States 


to the value of $13,485 and Canada 
$12,290. 


Bitten by a lamb a man’s death 
was the subject of an inquest at Pon- 


_|trilas, Herefordshire, recently. 


Slum clearance of fifty acres in 
Bristol will cost a million pounds. 


HISTORIC WARSHIP 


Nelson's old flag-ship, the }*Vieto 


Great Britain and the United States| everyday affairs of life it is finding 
became aroused. 
previous year. Practically all the]. 


supplied automobiles to these = and state your date of birth. 


Your Handwriting Reveals 
Your Character ! 


By LAWRENCE HIBBERT 
(Grapho-Analyst) 


(All Rights Reserved) 


(Editor's Note: This is the first of 
a series of fascinating articles on this 
very interesting subject of Character 
Reading from Handwriting. The 
author, a well-known handwriting 
expert, has an intéresting announce- 
ment to make following this article.) 


There is always something thrill- 
ing in the mysterious. For thousands 


of years, people have paid money to} 
fortune-tellers in return for a glimpse | 


sometimes accurate, if flashy; and 
sometimes, amazingly prophetical— 
of the Future. Down through the 
ages, people have yvarnec for an op- 
es of tearing aside the vail 
iding To-morrow from To-day. 
There will always be a thrill of the 
mystical or occult in these foresce- 
ings of the Future. 

The astrologist who looks at the 
stars, and predicts your future from 
trem; the soothsayer who peers into 
the globe and tells your fortuac; the 
palmist who scrutinizes the hand for 
the tell-tale lines it shows; the phren- 
ologist who searches your head for 
the revelations it discloses, down to 
the ever-popular amateur at the tea- 
cups, who. focusses on. the tea-leaves 
—all have their followers who swea 
by them. 

And, marching a path that is built 
on solid scientific deduction, the 
Grapho-Analyst is gaining an ever- 
increasing body of adherents who 
find his analyses of character oft- 
times sensationally accurate. 

Grapho-Analysis, the science of 
character delineation from handwrit- 
ing—what is it really? 

Robert Saudek, the famous Euro- 
pean crytologist, says: “There is no 
such thing as handwriting, but only 
brainwriting.” This is because the 
impulse and motive power come from 
the brain. Writing is no mere mus- 
cular act. If you think it is, try to 
write a letter whilst reading a book! 

The Physicians’ Times Magazine 
some time ago made the statement 
that “the nerves at the extreme fin- 
ger-tips are extraordinarily sensitive, 
and traces of grey matter, similar to 
that in the brain, may be found.” 

Throughout the world, Grapho-An- 
alysis is gaining recognition as a 
practical science. In a number of 
European universities and colleges 
the subject is being studied as a reg- 
ular part of the curriculum, In the 


increasing application. 
Business men, teachers and doctors 
are using it to supplement their own 


Using Their Brains 

People In England Making Money 
By Unusual Means 

Just round the corner, everywhere 
in Britain, there lies wealth waiting 
to be picked up in a thousand unex- 
pected ways by men and women of 
brains and initiative. 

There is a radium mine at St. 
Ives in Cornwall, fof instance, which 
several of the well-informed local in- 
habitants will tell you possesses 
enough of that rare substance to sup- 
ply half the hospitals of the world. 

Some people have made fortunes 
by using that prosaic and very com- 
mon substance chalk in unusual ways. 

Modern science can turn it into 
edible fat, and this process may soon 
become a commercial proposition. 

Plans are already afoot, indeed, to 
equip a factory for such a modern 
miracle. 

A man saw a fortune in sawdust 
two years ago. 

He borrowed the money, 


bought 


an old lorry, and went along to his 
local London sawmills, where they 
almost gave him their “waste pro- 


duct”, which he sold at a handsome 
profit to butchers and others. 

He now owns five lorries, but he 
s not resting on. his laurels, for he 


scented money in short hair. He 


buys it from barbers and sells it to 
builders for mixing with their plas- 


ter. 


An engineer recently designed a 
telescope with a slot in which you 
placed a penny. 

The “works” allowed you to look 


through the instrument for a certain 


time before a shutter closed it again. 
He put one on Southend pier and 
found that he was ‘making £1 a week 


out of it, for even at night “you can 
look at the moon and the stars”, 


Now the man has his telescopes on 


the majority of seaside piers and 
parades, and you can work out his 
profit for yourselves. 


If you can devise a way to-har- 


ness the tides or make the obtaining 
of the gold suspended in the sea a 


paying proposition you will make 
your fortune. 


And while on the subject of gold, 


there is Britain's richest gold, vein 
still awaiting further development. 


It lies near Dolgelly in Wales. The 


specialized knowledge. Indeed, many| Prince of Wales and Clogau Mines 
of the largest commercial undertak-| have both supplied wedding rings to 
ings in the world submit to grapho-/the royal family. 


analysts the handwriting of app - 
cants for important positions; it is 
being used more and more frequently 
in criminal and civil courts, and even 
lovers, hesitating before stepping off 
the brink of matrimony, consult a 
Grapho-Analyst for an analysis of 
the handwriting of their intended 
bride or bridegroom. 

Do you want a personal analysis of 


y 
open the doors of opportunity to you, 
and certainly, it will astonish p 
with its revelations of c 
talents. Send a letter in 


. you 
acter and 
ur normal 


Enclose with 10c coin, (for each 
specimen) and 3c stamped addressed 
envelope to: Lawrence Hibbert, Gra- 
pho-Analyst, 


c-o Winnipeg News- 


paper Union, 175 McDermot Ave., E., 


Winnipeg. Please allow at least two 
weeks for a reply, which will be mail- 
ed as soon as possible. i 


[ieee pee ema 
Honey should be kept in-qg warm 
place, economics- specialists advise. 


RECEIVES VISITORS 


The richest part of the vein, it is 


said, still lies untouched in wild coun- 
try between those two mines. 


Curio collecting may also bring 


you in an unexpected windfall, even 
in these days when the country has 
‘been combed fairly thoroughly. 


At Denham, that lovely little vil- 


lage, a man recently bought a very 
rare grate for £10. He sold it for 
£200! ; 


Recipes For This Week 


(By Betty Barclay) 


BLACKBERRY AND PINEAPPLE | 
i _ SAM 
4 cups (2 lbs.) prepared fruit 
Juice of 1 lemon : 
7 cups (3 Ibs.) sugar 

% bottle fruit pectin. ‘ 

To prepare fruit, crush thoroughly 
or grind about 1 quart fully ripe 
blackberries. Pare 1 medium fully 
ripe pineapple and chop very fine or 
grind, using finest knife of food chop- 
per. Combine fruits. 

Measure sugar into large kettle. 
Add lemon juice and prepared fruit, 
filling up last cup with water if nec- 
essary. Mix well and bring to a full 
rolling boil over hottest fire. Stir 
constanty before and while boiling. 
Boil hard 1 minute, Remove from 
fire and stir in fruit pectin, Then 
stir and skim by turns for just 5 
minutes to cool slightly, to prevent 
floating fruit. Pour quickly. Paraf- 
fin hot jam at once. Makes about 10 
glasses (6 fluid ounces each). 


MARSHMALLOW PIE 
(Makes 1 Pie) 

2 eggs 
4 tablespoons cornstarch 
% cup sugar 
1 cup orange juice 
1 tablespoon lemon juice 
1 teaspoon grated orange rind- 
% cup water 
2 tablespoons butter 
dozen marshmallows 

Beat egg yolks. Mix cornstarch 
and sugar. Combine all ingredients 
except marshmallows, Cook in double 
boiler 15 minutes, Fold in the marsh- 
mallows cut in small pieces, Cool. 
Place in baked pie shell, Cover with 
meringue made of whites of eggs 
and 2 tablespoons sugar, and brown 
slightly in a slow oven, 


— 


All things are of a temporary na- 
ure, 80 what's the use of worrying. 


ry”, all beflagged and gay, waiting to| ‘The nearest star to the earth is 
25 trillion miles away from us. 


-| airdromes, 


| Little Journeys In Science 


(By Gordon H. Guest, M.A.) 


Insects are our greatest friends— 
and. our greatest enemies. Some aid 


man and some harm him. Once in> 


the history of the earth it appeared 
as if they might inherit the earth 
and gain control of it. Scientists have 
counted 340,000 different kinds of in- 
sects that are living to-day. Of this 
vast number man has domesticated 
and used the products of the labor of 
only one—the honeybee. 

It is of interest to know that an 
insect that can crawl through the 
eye of_a needle has a little heart and 
other organs. Insects reverse man's 
method and wear their skeletons out- 
side. They are without lungs but air 
gets to every part of their bodies 
through a large number of micro- 
scopic tubes. This system of obtain- 
ing air works so efficiently that it is 
doubted whether an insect’s blood is 
ever impure. 

In regard to intelligence, many an 
insect has more brain-power, in pro- 
portion to its weight, than have 
human beings. A spider is a very 
expert bridge-builder,- In Texas ate 
found ants which clear the ground 
around their hills of all plants except 
those that produce such seeds as it 
wishes to eat. Bees have, in pro- 
portion to their weight much more 
intelligence than man. House-flies are 
not noted for their brain power but 
they are experts with their wings, 
which they flap 330 times a second; 
bumblebees, 240; wasps, 110; dra- 
gon-flies, 28; and butterflies, 9. 

Among the most useful insects is 
the bee, which supplies honey, and in 
some countries produces bee bread 
for the support of human life. Silk- 
worms furnish material for clothing, 
and their culture is an important in- 
dustry in many countries. The com- 
mon wood ant is used extensively in 
Europe for the manufacture of vine- 
gar. . The cochineal insects supply a 
valuable coloring material, while 
even the grub is used as a food in 
the West Indies. 5 

Among the insects which are most 
harmful to man may be included the 
Hessian fly, potato bug, chinch bug, 
army worm, cotton boll weevil, cot- 
ton boll moth, and grasshopper, al! of 
which attack growing crops. 


University Trained Airmen 


Oxford And Cambridge Pilots Join 
Royal Air Force 

Britain is adding many hundreds of 
airplanes to defences, and there is 
plenty of evidence that no matter 
how many may be ordered in the fu- 
ture, there will be no lack of) skilled 
pilots ready to take charge of them 
at once. In almost every city there 
is a flying club, besides which, the 
universities of Oxford and Cambridge 
have their own squadrons. Only 75 
men can be trained at each, and there 
are always long waiting lists for 
vacancies. 

Every year these squadrons undér- 
go a period of attachment to the 
Royal Air Force at regular R.A.F. 
and function as fully 
qualified military pilots. At the end 
of the last term the Oxford squadron 
had turned out 249 finished pilots, 
having done 15,000 flying hours with- 
out anything more than minor mis- 
haps, indicating the skill of the in- 
structional staff and the quality of 
the machines. 

Students are taught “blind” and 
ordinary fiying. ‘There is a mark of 
100 points to aim at, 40 being for 
general proficiency, 30 for aerobatics 
or “stunt” flying, and 30 for forced 
landings.—St. Thomas Times-Journal, 


No Free Advertising 

A violinist was very much disap- 
pointed wtih the account of his re- 
cital printed in the paper of a small 
town. : 

I told you three times,” complained 
the musician to the owner of the 
paper, “‘that the instrument I used 
was a genuine Stradivarius, and in 
this story there was not a word about 
it, not a word.” 

“That is as it should be. When 
the Stradivarius Company advertise 
their fiddles in my paper, under 10 
cents a line, you can come round and 
tell me about it.” 

Not What He Meant 

Two English tourists were stand- 
ing gazing at Niagara Falls. 

“Isn't it marvellous!” said one. 

“Just magnificent. To stand here 
makes a man feel like a little grub.” 

“You're right,” replied the other, 
"T've had nothing to eat since break- 
fast myself.” 

Young Farmer: “What happen 
to those suet puddings you made yes- 
terday, Jane?” 

Young Wife: “As you didn’t like 
them, I gave them to the ducks.” 

Farmer: “So that's where my 
ducks have gone—they're sunk!” 


ie 


+ ih ae 


‘ 


THE REVIEW, REDCLIFFT, ALBERTA ede 


REDUCING MADE HER 
LOOK YOUNGER 


A Burden Of Fat Gone 


Here is another case where the 
trim, slim figure of youth has dis- 
placed the coarse, fat outline of mid- 
die age. It is a housekeeper writing. 
She says:— aes 

‘I cannot say what weight IT was, 
but I was very fat—a burden to 
myself. I have taken three bottles of 
Kruschen Salts, and now I am quite 
sender. I am over 56, and people 
take me for 40. I am more than 
picud of myse'f. You can take it 
from me that every word of this is 


and Tiny Tots broadcast was a great 
success, and Mr. Hoyt expressed his 
Pleasure and surprise on learning 
that Camilla was the author and 
artist who was so ably stimulating 
business for his company. 

Peter's exhibit was awarded the 
Paris scholarship, and he prepares 
for his journey to France. After the 
ship's departure from New York, he 
fs on his wav to his cabin when he 
meets Avis Werth.» During the voy- 
age Avis tells Peter that Camilla 
Smashed his scholarship exhibit in a 
fit of temper, and he believes her. 

(Now Go On With The Story) 


CHAPTER LIX 


Camilla did not recognize her visi- 
tor for a moment, so long had it 


‘MAKE YOUR FALSE 
TEETH HOLD: FAST 


Eat, talk, sing and shout and never 
embarrassment. Your false teeth 
stick all day long when you sprinkle 
on Dr. Wernet’s Powder—they fit 
snugly—comfortably—they can’t slip. 
Prescribed by world’s leading dentists 
—they know it’s the best! Costs but 
little—any drugstore. 


“Peter can have all the Paris} 
scholarships he wants—-me for the! 
*good old green. I only wanted to go 


to Paris to tide over the depression, | 


anyway. First crack after the ex-| 


| finally reminded her, | 


tion and ardor transferred them-| 
selves to Avis, and almost before he| 
was aware of what was happening, 
he found himself caught up and 
hurled along by the mighty force of} 
his desires. Her nearness tantalized | 
him, maddened him; until on that 
last magic evening of moonlight and 
sea breeze, when the emotions were 
strangely alive and alert with the 


anticipation of the morning’s lAnd-| 
ing, he found his lips pressed to hers, | 
himself holding her intoxicating fra- 


grance in his arms, and all else 
oblivion 
“But 


oe 


that man you love,” he 


“That man--is you, Peter darling,” 


CTUALLY—it takes less than 1¢ worth of 
Magic Baking Powder to make a big, three- 
layer cake, And you can depend on uniform good- 


ibi Y e | ae ness—every time. No wonder Canada's foremost 
true. 1 took a teaspoonful in hot been since their last meeting. But/| x ty: one be ay ed pcan kings) she confessed. | cookery experts say it doesn’t pay to take chances [ese 
water every morning till I ited three| after an instant, she recalled his) °UYS ™Y ght’ and gives me an; He was dazed. “Oh--I begin to with doubtful baking powder. Bake with Magic MAGI 
bottles. Now I only take half a tea.|name. “Oh—Mr. Matson, good after-|°T@eT to do a larger copy for the) see light.” and be sure! 
spoonful each morning. I cannot! noon.” entrance to the airport. Then I al-| She laughed softly. ‘Dear Peter, | 
recommend. the Kruschen Salts F 


“CONTAINS NO ALUM.” This 
true 


a RE 


LGM een A AE ts 


eee nao 


enough, for they are worth their 
weight in gold.”—Mrs. A. H. 
Kruschen Salts combat the cause of 


. MADE IN CANADA or any harmful ingredient. 
oe by assisting the eres ma rr that he was. “The very same—|5°Me little modernistic figures that) “1 don't know,” he confessed de- - 
perform their functions properly— »| be will manufacture by thousands to , = 
to throw off each day those waste Camilla. Lord, but you look swell. y a jectedly. 


products and poisons which, if allow: 
ed to accumulate, will be converted 
by the body's chemistry into fatty 
tissue. 


- Ne 


OCCASIONAL WIFE 


she offered hers in greeting, like 
the clumsy make-believe gentleman 


His frank glance admired her’ from 
head to heel. “And no wonder! 
Didn't you just go up in a rocket to 
success? What do you think, I listen 
to every one of your broadcasts.” 


She smiled reservedly. “It's nice | 


to know that someone listens in. But 
why should you be interested in chil- 
dren's stories?” 


He extended his hand, even before | most collapsed when fortune threw} you are simply loo god to be 


her arms around me again, and a} 


novelty dealer bought the patents on | 


put in the five-and-dime stores. What 
do you say, is that a break or isn’t 
it?” 

Her face lighted with genuine ad- 
miration. “Indeed it is, and I'm) 
awfully glad for you. I hate to think 
that you could do a thing like that 
to Peter-—-but since it came out all 
right, there must have been some 


MAGIC 


Now that you know 
going to do about it?” 


what are you) 


Affer a little While, she consoled 
him, “Oh, well, why think about that) 
now? Tonight is tonight. Tomorrow 
is another day. Tomorrow, we reach 
Paris. There is so much to be done, 
You are going to be very busy. But 
we can see each other often, and 
when you are settled, we can have 
such glorious times together—while | 


Persia Cleared Of Beggars 


Incurables Sent To Institutions And 
Able-Bodied Must Work 

By..a. ministerial. edict all beggars 

have been swept off the streets of 

Persian towns and even from the 

courtyards of mosques where for cen- 


statement on every tin is your 
Quarantes that Magic Baking 
Powder ts free from alum 


| Little Helps For This Week | 


“The -Lord bless thee and keep 
thé’; the Lord take His face t shine 
upon thee and be gracious unto thee; 
the Lord lift up His countenance 
upon thee, and give thee peace.” 


n turies since Islam entered the coun-| 1, b ; 
EDNA ROBB WEBSTER “T’m not. I listen just to hear your| ®®80" in the whole plan. I’m glad) we wait.” She cid not say what they | try they have begged for alms. Nc mite ad eit 
— voice,” you told me about it, Gus. I appre-| would be waiting for, but it hung in| ‘The lame, the blind and the insane 

Author “ ", “Lipstick : | i ‘ , |’ © Love how cheering is Thy ray; 
of ‘anes +a Her manner became more aloof. pe hh me does mean something) the alr between them. : __|have been sent to institutions. The) All pain before Thy + hres 

“Is that what you came here to tell aa tiyancy wo'eaes pomede acg His rape re to be an accept: | able bodied have been put to work on a peo ‘ 
SYNOPSIS me? If it is, I'm frightfully busy, se ee the new railroad with the option of} Care, anguish, sorrow melt away, 
Mr. Matson.” for all our lives. But don’t be re- (To Be Continued) going to prison with hard labor for Where ~~ Thy healing beams 

vengeful and petty like that again, arise. 


Camilla Hoyt and Peter Anson, 
young and in love, marry secretly, 
deciding to live their own lives apart 
until Peter is able to provide for her. 
Peter is a young, struggling sculptor 

to win a competition for & 


_ trying 
scholarship abroad and Camilla is the 


adopted daughter of a wealthy fam- 
ily. She is it to inherit money 
when es of age and so is 
studying “commercial art in the hope 
of landing an agency job. Others in 
the story are Avis Werth, another 
wealthy girl who is trying to win 


“Oh, see here, little fireworks, don't 
you get so peeved over a little thing 
like that. 
you something that I think you 
might like to hear. How about it?” 

“Well?” she waited. 

“I just heard the other day that 
they accused you of destroying 
Peter's exhibit piece.” 

“Well-—I didn’t. And Peter knows 
that.” 


No, I came here to tell! 


will you?” Camilla implored him. 

“Not on your life, I won't. Me for 
the straight and narrow—and pros- 
perity.” 

“I hope it continues for you,” she 
smiled. “You have some fine things 
in you to develop, I'm sure.” 

“Gee, but you're sweet. Tell you 
what, I might even write you a 
statement of confession to show. to 


three years. For the work they do 
they are paid the minimum wage per- 
mitted by the state schedule for 
labor. 

’ Only those who know the East can 
appreciate the scope of this reform. 
In Teheran, which has a population 
of 300,000, there were 22,000 beggars 
organized into fraternities, guilds 
and corporations sometimes dating 
back to the foundation of the city. 


THE RHYMING 
OPTIMIST 


By Aline Michaelis 


THE MAN WHO DREAMS 


Who is so wrong as the man who 


O Father nothing may I see, 
Nothing desire or seek but Thee. 
~—P. Gerhardt. 


There is a faith in God and a clear 
perception of His will and designs 
which gives to its possessor confi- 
dence, patience, and a sweet com- 
posure under all varied and troubling 
aspect of events such as no man can 
realize unless he has felt its influ- 


a : : Peter sometime, if you will promise dreams, telam’ forhade “Asie tateebevenive ence in his own heart. There is a 
j pe? § oF oS. baat pode, ‘Wasn't it that clawish bee Avi8S/me to burn it right away after he| Trading the real for the thing which with beggars on heen grounds that communion with God in which the 
mate with whom ‘he has quarrelled,| Werth, who accused you of it? reads it, 


- 


- to announce before the 
_ she and Peter are married. 


‘After a party at an exclusive club, 
when the rest of the members of the 
party go to a cabaret to continue the 
gaietv, Peter and Camilla slip off to 
the beach by. themselves and fall 
asleep on the sand. When they awake 
it is early morning and Avis and 
another boy are standing near them. 
This. makes it necessary i iy on 
party 
Camilla 
urges Peter to accept some of her 
earnings to help him along, but Peter 
refuses and th quarrel. After 


“What difference does it make if 
she did?” 

“I just thought she might be able 
to convince him that you did.” 

“That's a silly thing to bring up 
now. Peter is on his way to Paris, 
as you well know.” 

“So is Avis’ — and on the same 
boat,” he watched her face closely 
for the effect, and was gratified with 
the result. 

She grew alarmingly white, as if 


I don't care to have in- 
criminating 
around,” ; 


“You don't need to do that. If you 
wish me to tell Peter, I shall. He will 
believe me, of course. And he will 
be relieved to know how it happened. 
I'm sure he never believed that I 
did it, anyway.” 

“Well, I'd advise you to keep your 
eye on Avis Werth.” 


evidence like that 


Camilla laughed with a deprecating| Snared and bound in the web of 


gesture. “Avis doesn’t worry me.” 


seems, 


Shaping the days in the mold of his alms are the surest road to paradise. 
need, 


The shah had to tread warily for the 
mosque was the beggars’ 
chosen pitch, and the precincts of the 
mosque have always been sanctuary. 
The sovereign determined to make 
religion see reason, and therefore per- 
suaded thé mujtahid of Ispahan, the 
highest Moslem dignitary, to send a 
lain to accompany him on an 

ap an tour of beggardom. 
The chaplain saw for himself the 


Building a world for his whim or his 
creed? 

Who is so foolish, so futile as he, 

Taking the false for reality? 

Weakly and cowardly well-contént 

With a toy in place of the world God 
meant? 

Waiting, while months and years slip 
past, 

Caughi in a net that holds him ‘ast, 


dream, 


soul feels the presence of the unseen 
One in the profound depths of his 
own betng with a vivid distinctness, 
and a holy reverence, such as no 
words can describe. There is a state 
of union with God, not often reach- 
ed, but it has been attained in this 
world, in which all the past, present 
and future seem reconciled, and 
eternity is won and enjoyed; and God 
and man, earth and heaven, with all 
their mysteries are apprehended in 
truth as they lie in the mind of the 


she had been struck a terrific blow. Slut whe did not helleve what ashe Losing the ‘truth of creation’s scheme seers Aine «Drape a ve = Infinite.—Samuel D. Robbins. 
é, Her head reeled sickeningly. But) gaia, and when Gus Matson had gone, | the po Trev pang ted thet fone saci of| "Tt is good to help the poor. It ts 
> she ero almost instantly and man |she sat huddied over her drawing| |. 1 cae aas evil to rob the, poor... The beggars The Man In The Moon | 
: aged :to reply bravely; “That's 8) por in’ .| Lacking in triumph ard mastery, ‘this eau wy of : ’ pays! Seat 
‘strange coincidence, isn't it? At io/abject milpery and despair. | Caching cheatel and folled as he? |°f thle town-are paling 


least, Peter will have pleasant com- 
pany on a slow voyage.” . 

“Lord, you're a brick, Camilla. I 
know how that gets you. You can’t 


to help you, because I’ve always been 
crazy about you and can’t bear to 
see you get a raw deal. Want to 
know who destroyed the statue?” 

She hesitated for a moment, “It 
would be rather a relief to have the 
mystery solved.” 

“Well—I did it.” 

Her startled eyes met his with 
amazement. “You? But why—and 
why should you confess it to me?” 

“One at a time, if you're going to 


fool me. That is why I came here} novice; and Avis as familiar with the 


Her thoughts leaped the expanse of 
land and ocean which divided them, 
and she visioned Avis and Peter on 
the boat together for hours and days. 
Then Paris—-Peter a stranger and a 


city, the customs, the language, as 
at home. Avis: seductive, amorous, 
subtle, confident, with everything to 
her advantage. Angry tears stung in 
her eyes. 

After a night of restless pacing 
the decks and turning in his upper 
berth, Petersemerged to a _ victory 
over his emotions. With bitter re- 
gret and angry resentment, he had 
slain love; and now looked upon the 
results dispassionately. Never again 


the poor and must therefore be 
driven from the sacred precincts of 
mosques.” 


Prefers Motor Cars 


Pope Pius Gives Up Horses And 
Closes His Stables © 

The Papal stables, which once had 
accommodation for sixty horses, 
have been finally closed down. Pius 
XI, his cardinals and prelates, have 
all taken to motor cars. No more 
will the streets of Rome ring to the 
tread of the stately coal-black horses 
which used to draw the carriages of 
members: of the Sacred College. Sad- 
dest of all at the change is the Pope's 
head coachman, or, as he is entitled 
to be called, “the Holy Father's noble 


doctor of Islamic law, also ruled that 
the Koran enjoined that the insane, 
the blind, the lame, and the sick 
should be treated with respect and 
consideration as being “afflicted by 
the most high God.” It was not pos- 
sible to respect them in the ‘public 
places, and therefore they must be 
put away and tended. 


Under-Sea Experience 


Deep Sea Divers Are Blinded By 
Flashlight Explosion 


The mutjahid, a wise and learned) 


Mythical Tenant Of The Lunar 
Planet Is Photographed 
The man in the moon has posed 
for his first television snapshot. — 
After smiling down for years into 
the world’s telescope lenses, the 
mythical tenant of the lunar planet 
has-been photographed by television 
and the picture transmitted to a 
radio receiver. : 
Reprovision of the moon's likeness 
—the first recorded use of television 
in astronomy—was announced by 
Philo T. Farnsworth, 28-year-old in- 
ventor-scientist of Philadelphia. 


SOURED ON THE 


: : of this medicine. You will eas’ | ive me the third degree,” he held| would he give rein to his emotions. er? Rr ONG: IM ae a time by a premature WORLD? —THAT'S LIVER \ 
a ae | etter ... sleep better... feel | up his hand in mock protest. ‘First,| Never again could he or would he : flashlight explosion, two members of 
@ ' better... look better. Life | I've told you to give you a square! permit himself to love anyone as he ; the New York Zoological Society's} Wake uy; Liver Bile 
ie will seem worth living again. | deal, Reason given above. Next, I| had loved Camilla. Work and suc- Has Rare Specimens deep-sea expedition spent an uncom- yes Calomal necossatl 
ieecs alae sup lonpee Begin | did it for two reasons: for revenge|cess were all that made life worth) ‘The Dunedin National museum of|¢,tanie five minutes down around rho feel sour, sluggish 
i ‘oth taking t today, on Peter for a former little incident | while, anyway. New Zealand has two rare and Pper-|the pottom of the sea at Bermuda, ssi atest beslive “ae 
LY 1A PINKH AW’S which you may recall, and to increase} jyq would devote every moment,| fect specimens of Moa.eggs. These) yoy several minutes after the DS GUND, OF nm ” 


VEGETABLE COMPOUND 


i 
iE 


the possibility of my own success, 
There was no doubt that he was one 
of my best rivals. That eliminated 
his chances, I thought, and increased 
mine by one. The results proved 
that I was right there. I was the 
Nels Nelson whose ‘Flight’ was sec- 
ond and lost the scholarship. So 


ly. “I may even have bettered his 
chances by what I did, and hurt my 
own. Well, he won. Oh, yes-—one 
thing more, You will wonder how I 
did it. I slipped upstairs and into his 
studio that night of the party, and 


every effort, every emotion to those 
elements. He would be hard and cold | 
and grasping like the rest of the | 
world—take what he wanted when) 
he wanted it, accept what pleased his | 
fancy, ignore all obligations to senti-| 
ment. He suspected that was the 


He thought of Avis with a mount- 
ing sense of appreciation and grati- 
tude. He had her to thank for so 
many things: his financial security, 
her influence in his behalf via the in- 


large flightless birds, resembling the 
ostrich, only larger, and confined to 
New Zealand, are thought to have 
become extinct more than 500 years 
ago, 


blinding flash, Dr. William Beebe 
and his assistant, Otis Barton, could 
only grope sightlessly around the in- 
terior of the great steel ball in which 
they had been lowered 1,500 feet be- 
low the surface. 

Sealed in their bathysphere, they 


Of the 92 known chemical ele- 


depth. But a short circuit exploded 
their four flashlight bulbs simul- 
taneously —instead of singly — and 
their picture-taking was suspended. 

By the time the explorers had been 
hauled back to the surface they had 


THe TAM us 
LINIMENT 


creed of all successful men—and| ments, 17 have not yet been found in) naq gone down to take photographs Post Office For Arctic 
Baptieby faa a pe hi peice Well, he would Join their the free a of strange sea monsters at that) yn Arctic post office just opened in 
sisdade "| ranks, C= — 


Tiksi Bay, on the shore of the Arctic 
Ocean, will maintain mail connection 
with Yakutsk (Siberia), 1,000 miles 
away, using reindeer as the means 
of transport. 


terests of John Danforth, even the recovered their sight fully and were| 
mate was listening in the lower hall when} truth about Camilla's unforgivable 4) on . nome the worse for thelr experienc, oetey belles consider a shiny nipe 
emmonis and and tarry you were discovered there. I thought} act. : tha } ‘4 nak : ; 
gubstances found is tobscee it was a lucky break for me.” He| ‘Three more days of such stern rea- M | WN A ed D S An Interesting Bible == 
a emoke, paused. soning and gradual resignment to a2 - Bible students. are interested in 
= Complete holder with ‘refills = “But I still don't understand why/|his new creed had done much for ¢ A ¢ ' ee a 301-year-old Bible owned by C, 8, 
B $1.00 ‘postpald, or from you are telling me. No one ever sus-| Peter's state of mind, Avis had | NT Cooper, of Windsor, Ontario, whick 
# Druggist or Tobacconist. Dealess pected you. Don't you know that I|/calmly observed this very obvious i @ | in i mM E has developed a curious quality of 


r 


could have you arrested?” 
“You! won't,” he said confidently. 


change and took 
gradually. 


advantage of it 


played upon her conviction that no 
matter how much a man renounces 


love, he is the eternal lover and re-| / 


faintly discernible luminescence, Con- 
taining all books of the. Bible, this 


NOW OBTAINABLE FROM “Neither would Peter, After all, I| She increased her personal atten- volume contains the Apocrypha and 

: Robt, Simpson Co, Limited have to admit that he's one swell|tions to him; made little intimate one of the first concordances ever 
i fhe T. Eaton Oo, Limited Besides, he won, didn't he?| ventures which became more pro- jpublished, The type used is Eng- 
= Liggotts —_ -y vad What's his kick? That group prob-| nounced as the days passed slowly; lish script and very difficult for mod- 


Mr. Cooper inherited the 


 - ‘ I Peter where he wanted to|cipient of love, that he cannot gub- 
= ~ GBahans WanTED yon rotten trick, but I landed = without some demonstration of Designed to make secure almost 
 CHANTLER & LTD, | myself in a cloud with 4 silver lining.| his emotional forces. She flattered anything from @ small bottle to a 
| Capadian Distr Maybe I didn’t deserve it, but just|and entertained him, exerted herself large door, a portable 'ock about the 
49 Wellington St. W. the same I am there and riding|to be attractive and desirable. size of a 25-cent piece may be at- 
| SQRONTO, ONT, pretty. All unconsciously, Peter's atten- tached without the use of tools, bs 
a ‘ * ** * ta 
ch : - “ a oe ce 


“ae 


< 
ri 
Pig 
» © 
z 
ad, 


FOR LIC Ct, + ti iat tl ny 


THE REDGLIFF REVIEW THURSDAY, SEPT 20th, 1984 


Ilustrated Lecture |Will is Wild Boy in | || a. Jothanwen and Me Kruse 
Here on October 4th] Latest Film Comedy|) 2™eresting |i. Wayne 


a ee Local Items - 
Hag Been Arranged sy Mr-|Pogers’ “Hargly Andy” Furniest Dr. and Mrs, Ward’ returned 

Hector Lang M. L. A. Of His Career Mr. Ruckman ot Vauxhall!Tuesday from a short vacation 
nik: tie te ek was a businegs Visitor in town|.:. Kdmonton nd Sedgewick. 

r Lang, . * 6 F 

: His wife wants him to ntire|°° Saturday. 
ion this constituency, has made ind play a littl, _, but all play eee Miss Jean Herrington has 
a'rangements with Mr. Donald) 44 no work makes Willa wild| Miss Naomi Pow is in Cal-|been relieving on the nursing 
Cameron, B. A. to give One of}, gary this week writing off her | staff of the Medicine Het hospi- 
#u lectures in Cliff Hall here} mse in brief, is the story of| N. examinctions. tal for the past few days. 
«n Thursday evening Oct.4th, Will. Rogers’ latest picture, ee 6 ae 

Mr. Cameron, who ig connect- “Handy Andy” Thur.Fri. and| Miss Vair of St‘Thomas Ont. | Mrs. ©. Hargrave ertertained 
ea with Extention departinent Sat. at the Monarch Theatre ‘*rived in town yestercay to| the members fo the Riverside 
ct the University of Alberta,) 4, a nce reports from the pre-|\ cit her sister, Mrs. J, R. Mac-|F:ok Club, Medicine Hat, at 


has chosen as his subject: “The! _ is is the furniest |i:cnzie and Mr. Mackenzie. iner home here last evening. 
Folk High School in Sean-|“O™s ** this is the 


comedy of hig career. And the Bs . os a 
« navia,” which deals with ed- | ighlight of-the story 1 this} A lage confi:mation class is | Miss Margaret Moore was the 
uention for adults in which reg ag cig prepared to jo’ the Ang | «tess last Wednesday at a 


delightful miscellaneors show 
«> in honor of Misg Doris Bain- 
see b ‘dge, a bride elect of this 


Pr. and Mrs. Jack Potter © of |™‘ nth. 


viar and systematic study of i 
some non-vocational subjects| _ Will is getting allong comfort 


under the guidance of « lectur-|®ly in hisdrug store when his future. 
ev or director. are ta'en up wife, Peggy Wood, persuades 
"y .e address will be illustrated rim to sell out. Firet he takes; “ ° 
with lantern slides, and it will| UP Pigeon raising, bur he has to Medicine Hat were gusts of Mr. 
be free to al? interestad stop that when hig pets fly all|‘-*¢ Mrs: R. S. Hodge over the 
‘This lecture, we are sure,|°Ver the house. Next he take>|" cek-end. 
vill prove highly interesting |"? Sf with uproarous results 
educational and instructive, and. Then his wife and daughter, 
should be well .attended by both| Mary Carlisle, persuade him tv 
old and young. attend the Mardi Gias in New 


Mr. Lang has been instr-| Orleans. was lost in the vicinity of Tilly, . Quite a number of local 
vmental in bringing several] That's when thingy rerly be- pee. |£ ortsmen went out after the 
such speakers here in tne past} tin to happen. Miss Phyllis Sanderson who ¢ cks last Saturday and some 
ad all have been thoroughly} Of couzse there’s more to the] ;,as been ill at her home here 470d bags are reported. 
enjoyad. . story than that. Much more | for the last few weeks. returne:| _. A R 
re Among other things. Among|io her duties at the Medicine! Jimmey McLarnin 
other things, Will serves as| {at hospitatl on Tuczday. the welterweight champion, by 
eupid in his daughter’s romance 2 8 © vinning from\Barney Ross in 
with a young man his wif:| Mr. 0. Vogstad, icft Saturday |® SPlit decision at Madison Squ- 
doesn’t approve of. And there | / ,, Seattle to meet his son, Ken- |‘ '¢ Garden, New York, last 
is a surprize ending that can’ |, th, of the U. S. Navy, wao has | Monday. 


caurch fére in the near 


* ¢ 8 
A school Field Day will ba 
held here on Oct. 4th ard great 
= Serta preparations are in progress foy 
Mr. Herb Cox had the mis- | the event. If the weather man 
sortune to lose his Cocker Span | will only be kind, a good day of 
iei Pat, while on gq shooting ex- sport is assured, 
pecition last week.. The do» otk df 


Prepare Now For 
The Fall and Winter 


We can supply you with || 1... tipped off in advanes. ‘it days leave. Mrs, Vogstad shia: 
STORM DOORS o ve wi] continug her ‘visit av the Mr. C, Rasmussen, of the 
AND WINDOWS. cast for another month, F ingville district who was in 
At Reasonable Prices LOOK AT YOUR LABEL rege the hospital undergoing treat- 


’ Mr. Bullen will be xt Cliff rent, is now out arcund again 
Hall on Tuesday evening at 8 feeling much improved — in 
clock to orgasize an adult sing |!"#!th. 

ing class. All interested shoulJ 
make it a point to be present, 
Cee Mr. Bullen’s ad. elsewhere 
in this issue. 


Do Your Repairing Now 
When Prices Are Low 
Orders left with H. J, Cox 
Promptly Attended to 


ee 
Don’t forget the ‘Illustrated 
1 ture in Cliff Hall on Thurs- 
wy evening Oct. 4th by Don. 
“ger * . ald Cameron B. A. of the Exten- 
{x 4. Dept. of Alberta Universit 
Right Rev. DT 1 ” 7. 
Bt eli St Saas Ue Soe 
Hat | | P imate of the Church of Eng-| ‘“ ’ 
Ind in Canada, in succession} 43;, many old flena in Red- 
tc the late Most Rev C. L. Wor- eliff will be glad to know that 
i His election took place at) Rey. H.C. B Gibson, of Vernon 
“ e General Synod in Montrea. |p C, will be in town nevi week 
uesday, ae While here he wil} conduct the 
The Sr. W. A. of St. Ambrom | Service om Ambrose church 
Church held en enjoyable Gibso ursday evening next Mr. 
Pridge aifd whist drive on Thur St. te “et at one t.me spies of 
day afternoon last in the Par: santa 


is}. Hall. Mrs. W. King won! 
first prize for Bridge and Mrs. ,FOR SALE—Fall Rye ‘or seed 


Prices: 10c, 15¢ and 25c 


MUSICAL REVUE: 
“WHAT PRICE JAZZ” 


BARGAIN DAY 


eter ——AT—— Pearson the consolation. In Apply R. Landis, west «f town, 
= Geofy Movie and News I ES ? V-hist Mrs. Bardell won the: sea 
Coming Mon., Tues., Wed. : K S hmors and th,  consolation' AUCTION SALE 
The Producers of “Cavalcade” Furniture Exchange ve nt fo. Mp, McKinnor 3 | An Auction Sale will be held 
p 817 Sixth Avenue jac the rear of the Town Hall o: 
629 Third Street Fall. and Winter “aturday, Sept. 22 at 2 o'clock 
“The World Phong 3664 Mdicine Hat 1 ™, when the goods ani 
ee c' attles of Joseph Boland will 
Moves On” fi New & Better Class ||} Goods Arriving |) sia tems. cash. 
With Franchot Tone Used Furniture it will pay you to H, N. Dacre, Auctioneer 
Madeleine Carroll —— ee 
— LESK’S FURNITURE EXCHANGE visit the KEETLEY JOHNSON 
Colered Cartoons and News “We Buy, Sell and Exchange” For Accident, Fire and 


Sickness Insurance 
Ocean Passenegr Service 
7th Street, Redcliff 


Lewis’ Bargain Store 
Medicine Hat 


Wonderful New Coats, 
Hats and Dresses Pouring. 
into Fleming’s Store 


Fall Styles are Delightfully Different and we 
advise our Redcliff Customers to choose early 


MOORE'S GREAT DRAPERY SALE 


Still Going Strong 
Marvelous Buys in All Lines of 
Draperies, Curtains, Scrims, Nets, Muslins, Etc. 
EVERY PIECE ON SALE 


100 Yards Dainty Scrim, per yard - - +» Oc 
Dainty Madras Panels 2 1-4 yds. x 36 in., sik - -29c¢ 
Silk Side Drapes, 50 inches wide, per yard - - 659¢ 


AND HOSTS OF OTHER BARGAINS 


COATS from $14.95 to $65.00 

WOOL DRESSES from $4.95 to $10.95 
SILK DRESSES from $3.95 to $10.95 

| poo HATS Felt and Velvet $1.75 to $2.95 


FLEMING’S °yits, Weshrorth’ 


J. J. MOORE & SON 


Phone 2787 


Near sfedicine Hat Garage 
rt: 


%, 


‘ ¥ 


is again]. 


—-roerenenrehinns 
eaenantiteeiemmmnmmmmniitediined iti i ate 


sled 
mit N. Dacre is at present, Mr. Alf. McGimpsey ix en- 
« swunvaia Park visiting her|larging the size of his confect- 
aaughter Mrs. Alf. Dutton and|icnery store, by moving his bar- 
Mr. Alf. Dutton. ber shop to the rear of the store 
> «es 
; eee 
A most interésting ‘lustrat- Mist E Srey; whe ‘tas 


ed lecture is in store for the at 
people of Redelitf and district |e” holidaying for the past 


when Mr. Doriald Cameron,B.A. two weeks with her sister at 
ccmes here on the evening of 4 eyburn, returned home ue 
vet. 4th. Th lecture will be] *tUrday, als 
.e. in Cliff Hall. 
nae se Miss Hazel Middleton met 
Miss Doris Bairvridge, a Sept! with a painful accident yester- 
ember bride elect, was tha guest |day at ner farm home north of 
of honer at an enjoyable mis-| Redcliff. While riding horse- 
eellaneous shower. given by|tack she was thrown from the 
Mrs. Norman Willis, y».t-rday' saddle breaking her right arm 
afternoon, About 65 ladies at |She was immediately removetl 
tended. Miss Bainbridge was ,'¢ Medicine Hat hospita) wher. 


the recipient of many lovely; the bone was set. The little 
and useful gifts. en is progressing favorably. 


TPHILCO RADIOS 


ttt th 
Plumbing, Heating | aria 

A musical instrument cof 

|$ Quality. Sold and preter 


and Repairing 
| red in 66 countries of the 


world. 

BATTERIES, RADIOS & 

RADIATORS REPAIRED 
T. ENNO 


Phone 8057 318 G.Rallway St 
MEDICINE HAT 


| Ry OIE 


Roofing a Specialty 
All Work Guaranteed 


Marsh Plumbing Co. 


Medicine Hat 


Heel Hugger Shoes 


Canada’s Finest Footwear 


If you have any se‘ious ideas of being smart this winter, 
give more than a passing thought to your shoes, because 
no matter how alluring your gown, no matter how pleas- 
ing your face, you cannot look or feel your best unless 
your shoes ase moulded to your feet in comfortable, 
stylish lines. You are invitdd to inspect uur New Fall 
Shoes, which have just arrived. 


THIS LOVELY BLACK 
KID PUMP . 

. With silver trimming, in 

sizes 4.to 8$.' AA to C 


widths. Per Pair ip 


$8.00 


A complete range of Black and Brown Street $8.00 
Oxfords in welt soles, size 84 to 10 new price pair 


LePAGE’S, Medicine Hat 


Ladies’ Wear, Men’s and Boys’ Wear, Boots and Shoes 


Medicine Hat Annual 
CELEBRATION 


Sept. 27th, 28th, 29th 


PPO 


Interprovincial 
Sheep Dog Trials 


Parades, Baseball, indian Villiage 
Whippet Dog Races 
ROTARY CARNIVAL 
Banquets and Entertainment Galore | 


THURSDAY, THE 27th, IS SHEEPMEN’S DAY | 
and we are anxious to have a Good 
List of Entries for Trials 


Sheepmen Entering Dogs for the Trials 
Please Advise J. A. KING, 651 Second St. 


pee 


It Pays to-Advertise in The Review 


i ti ue Sia ais ol Oi Mama ae ae